Snapple-related stories
Posted Nov 28th 2007 10:19AM by Jason Hughes
Filed under: Industry, 30 Rock
NBC's 30 Rock makes fun of the network, television in general and, in at least a few instances, product integration. Product integration is the new way to get advertising money that's becoming more and more popular. The Office blatantly refers to real corporations like Staples all the time and football has John Madden's scribbles sponsored by someone now. Well, on a recent episode of Rock, Tina Fey and Alec Baldwin blatantly praised Verizon Wireless in a brief exchange before Fey turned to the camera and said directly, "Can we have our money now?"
Funny and lucrative apparently, as Yahoo! reports today that this was a real case of product integration, with Verizon paying for the "commercial" which at the same time was making fun of the very thing they were doing which ... wow, this gets confusing.
Continue reading Product integration "parodies" on 30 Rock are real
Posted Feb 4th 2007 10:20PM by Brett Love
Filed under: Sports, CBS, Commercials, Super Bowl
A fun entry from the folks at Snapple. I'm a Peach Iced Tea fan myself, but I'd be willing to give the Green Tea with EGCG a try. So, the commercial is a success. I like the photography with the temple high atop the mountain and the dullard seeking out the wisdom of the master is a joke that never gets old.
You could see that ending coming, because why wouldn't it be on the bottle, but I like the little bit on the end where he repeated "It's on the back of the bottle." in a mocking tone as he made his way back down the mountain. Not a showstopper, but fun.
Posted Nov 21st 2006 11:14AM by Joel Keller
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, NBC, OpEd, Commercials, My Name Is Earl, Watercooler Talk, The Office, 30 Rock

So the first night of NBC's new "Must-See TV" lineup (except
Scrubs) turned out to be eventful for more than one reason: not only did we see a pivotal episode of
The Office, the cast of
My Name Is Earl in Claymation, and the first Thursday
30 Rock, we saw more self-referrential product placements in one night than at any time I could remember.
The first one was when we saw
The Office's Kevin going nuts over the
Staples MailMate shredder. "This shreds eveything," he says with a sense of childlike wonder. "It shreds CDs. It shreds credit cards..." The look on his face after he realized he shredded his own credit card is priceless, as was the salad he made with the shredder right before the credits. Oh, and by the way, Staples had an ad for the MailMate during the "supersized" episode.
Continue reading Thursday was product placement night on NBC