I know this ad is a few years old. Is it ever too late to write about a total piece of shit? (Answer: no.)
First things first. Is there some compelling reason why this woman would be lying to her friend on the phone about her diet? I mean, once you've stated you're, you know, on a diet, it's kind of already out there. Why then go on to pretend that you're some sort of magical person who can eat a million desserts and lose weight?
The counterargument, I guess, is that she's not lying - the friend knows she's naming Yoplait flavors and it's just the dumb, sweets-craving husband who's confused. But if that's the case, why does she describe apple turnovers as "sort of my weakness?" Really, one random flavor of this 100-calorie cup of yogurt is your weakness? Come on.
Woman: "My diet? Well, yesterday I had an apple turnover. Mm-hmm. I know, it's sort of my weakness."
I mean, if the friend knows she's talking about yogurt, what could POSSIBLY fill the gaps in that conversation?
Woman: "My diet? Well, yesterday I had an apple turnover."
Friend: "You mean a cup of Yoplait yogurt flavored like an apple turnover, whatever that means beyond just 'tastes like an apple, more or less?'"
Woman: "Mm-hmm."
Friend: "Good for you, I guess?"
Woman: "I know, it's sort of my weakness."
Friend: "Am I even part of this conversation? God, shut up."
Woman: "I always keep it in the house."
The use of "it" here is, I suppose, evidence that the friend knows she's talking about yogurt, because it's a weird pronoun choice to refer to apple turnovers, in my opinion. But it's more likely that it's evidence that this ad was sloppily written, as if we needed much more of that.
Woman: "Well, that, and Boston cream pie, white chocolate strawberries - yeah, yeah! - and, mmm, key lime pie."
I honestly have no idea what to make of the "yeah, yeah!" part, which really could go either way as far as proof of what she is supposed to be talking about. But I've also lost interest because there isn't enough evidence to discount my original theory, and based on my original theory, fuck this woman.
By the way, check the bottom of the screen at this point in the ad for some truly awesome fine print.
Woman: "Yeah! Mm-hmm, I've already lost some weight!"
Fine print: "As part of a reduced calorie diet and regular exercise."
So basically what you're telling me is that the yogurt has effectively nothing to do with it. Good to know!
This series only gets worse, by the way, and the people in it only get more obviously full of lies. Check out this piece of shit:
Am I supposed to like the main character of this ad?
Woman: "Could you take all of these in for me, please?"
Seamstress: "All of them?"
Woman: "Well, it's the Boston cream pie, and the apple turnovers, and the white chocolate strawberries, and the key lime pie."
Didn't you say you have fourteen flavors? FUCK YOU for using the same four in every ad.
Seamstress: "So you need them let out."
Woman: "No, no, in."
Seamstress: "Out."
Woman: "Uh, in."
This goes on forever, while wacky French music plays in the background. Seriously, though: am I supposed to like this woman? She's a bitch. She goes into this shop, lies like she's been eating a lot of desserts, then treats the seamstress like a fucking moron for being "confused" about the issue. For good measure, this ad ends with a "joke" so bad I'm not even going to repeat it here. I can't believe someone got paid to write this and that it was filmed and aired. It's awful.
There are other ads in this series, like a follow-up to the first one where the husband is busy bragging to someone about all the desserts he's eating and yet staying thin, and the lying becomes more and more blatant. What's Yoplait's angle? "Our product is so bad you'll want to lie about eating it?" "See if these flavor compounds can distract you from the fact that you're eating a soul-crushing cup of diet yogurt?" Yoplait: It is so not worth telling anyone you ate it.
3 comments:
Actually, you know what the second ad kind of reminds me of? That fucking "of course, dog biscuits" Pepto-Bismol ad. Torturing a premise like this should be a violation of the Geneva Convention.
Haha, insanium in the cranium. These yogurt commercials are so awful.
After Yoplait's 2006 campaign with the adults screaming in supermarkets with the voices of shrill children, I wrote them a scathing letter asking that they please stop treating their audience like retards. And this is what they came up with next.
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