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GoneOffShore

(17,337 posts)
Sun Feb 7, 2021, 11:21 AM Feb 2021

'The Middle' - Bruce Springsteen for Jeep - Superbowl Ad



How Bruce Springsteen Agreed To Do a Super Bowl Commercial for Jeep
The musician known as “The Boss” will command two minutes of commercial time in Super Bowl LV Sunday night, all part of a mammoth Jeep ad meant to reflect a national mood of coming together after four years of politics and polarization. The spot does something else, too: It ends a decade-long quest by one of the industry’s most colorful marketing executives to convince the iconic artist behind stirring songs like “Born in the U.S.A.,” “Growing Up” and “The Rising” to do something he has never done before — align himself with an advertiser.

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'The Middle' - Bruce Springsteen for Jeep - Superbowl Ad (Original Post) GoneOffShore Feb 2021 OP
Gosh, I love the Boss! DonaldsRump Feb 2021 #1
The Wild, the Innocent, and the E Street Shuffle Ohiogal Feb 2021 #2
The Washington Post samplegirl Feb 2021 #3

Ohiogal

(31,911 posts)
2. The Wild, the Innocent, and the E Street Shuffle
Sun Feb 7, 2021, 11:26 AM
Feb 2021

I played the grooves off of that one back in the day.

samplegirl

(11,463 posts)
3. The Washington Post
Mon Feb 8, 2021, 04:28 AM
Feb 2021

Sure don’t like this commercial!

Titled “The Middle,” the ad begins with a hovering drone shot — always a drone shot! — over an empty two-lane highway. A folded newspaper flaps ominously on the front seat of Springsteen’s 1980 Jeep CJ-5 as he begins a spiel in the introspective cadence honed during his recent Broadway-to-Netflix thing: “There’s a chapel in Kansas standing on the exact center of the Lower 48. It never closes. All are more than welcome to come meet here — in the middle.”
This is, in fact, a real chapel in Lebanon, Kan. — but Jeep and the Boss are proposing it as a metaphorical reconciliation site for a nation of broken citizens who remain deeply terrified of one another. As the camera hops between images of bridges, trains, flags and horses, solemn streaks of steel guitar float behind Springsteen’s unity monologue as if quietly mourning his integrity. And this is sad. Springsteen was famous for refusing to cave to advertisers across his 48-year career, but now here he is on our Super Bowl screens, squinting into the middle distance like a parody of himself.
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Hey, maybe his intentions were good, or maybe he thought this farce would be okay after Bob Dylan did his dumb Super Bowl commercial, or maybe this whole cash grab is going straight to charity. It doesn’t matter. Despite the healing sound of his voice, Springsteen is ultimately preaching reconciliation without reckoning — which after January’s Capitol siege is no longer an acceptable path toward progress. Plus, this is Bruce Springsteen. Isn’t he the guy who’s supposed to know everything about hard work? Suggesting that we should all swiftly and metaphorically travel to the nucleus of White, rural America to make up and move along feels insulting and wrong.

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