Bruce Springsteen urges unity in Jeep commercial. Rock n roll icon Bruce Springsteen can now be seen urging Americans to come together in a commercial for Jeep called "The Middle."
Melodramatic and patronizing corporate TV ads are as big a part of the Super
Bowl as a Tom Brady appearance, though New Jersey music legend Bruce Springsteen’s obnoxious Jeep ad about the “ReUnited of America” took patronizing to a whole new level.
Considering “The Boss” has been slamming Trump and his supporters (which he has called “bums” and a “fucking nightmare”) for the better part of five years, his 2021 Jeep Super Bowl ad seemed less an appeal to unity, than a call for Trumpers to get on with Democrats far left ambitions for their country.
The ad, produced by Jeep and starring the “Born to Run” singer, made a heavy appeal for Americans to find common ground with one another after a contentious Donald Trump presidency. The setting of the ad was a chapel in Lebanon, Kansas, the exact geographical middle of the United States of America. The singer elaborated on the obvious metaphor with soulful and somber words: “All are more than welcome to come
Bruce Springsteen issued a call for common ground, unity and political centrism in a 2-minute long ad for Jeep set to run during the Super Bowl on Sunday.
by Nancy Derringer Here s something Bruce Springsteen probably doesn t hear too often: Sorry, Bruce, but you re no Eminem. Ten years after the bombshell Chrysler Super Bowl commercial that told the rest of the country
Detroit is back and cooler than your city, the same agency Doner, in Southfield is back with a similar ad that feels just a little . derivative. Of course the nation will lap it up like a kitten at a dish of cream, because, to echo Eminem s statement in that 2011 Chrysler ad: This is America. This is what we do. This meaning get sentimental about an evocative car ad with emotional music, a giant of popular music and a message that will stop the chatter at the dip bowl and make at least some people kinda teary.