On a side note, these three commercials when taken together offer up a pretty weird composite of American life:
The chiseled, murderously competitive vision of masculine beauty, power, and commodified Art.
The sly, supple feminine: A Nubile Corporate Spring in the Tecnological Air.
And verily and forsooth, the ne'er do well loser, the guy Harrogate remembers from the days in Pete's couch, the guy who if he isn't careful will slip through the cracks and be unable to afford hot water for a shower, let alone a regular credit report.
BTW: Praytell, who is singing the song in the second commercial you posted?
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Kids today.
On a side note, these three commercials when taken together offer up a pretty weird composite of American life:
The chiseled, murderously competitive vision of masculine beauty, power, and commodified Art.
The sly, supple feminine: A Nubile Corporate Spring in the Tecnological Air.
And verily and forsooth, the ne'er do well loser, the guy Harrogate remembers from the days in Pete's couch, the guy who if he isn't careful will slip through the cracks and be unable to afford hot water for a shower, let alone a regular credit report.
BTW: Praytell, who is singing the song in the second commercial you posted?
I LOVE the free credit report commercial guys!! I say taste is overrated and Sweet Baby J should totally bounce along to the catchy tune :)
Supa-T also enjoys the CreditReport.com commercials--all of them. He's also quite the fan of some of the local ads--two local ladies, in particular ;)
The AT&T ad is a Lupe Fiasco song. Jill Scott sings the hook. (And I must confess that the credit report guys are cute!)
Is there something wrong with my kid? Aside from the Mac commercial which featured Feist, he doesn't pay attention to commercials at all.
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