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Bear and the Gang is an advertising campaign for the Boston Bruins created by Arnold Worldwide and the Boston Bruins as part of the Bruins Digital Entertainment Network ('Bruins DEN'). [1] It consists of several episodes that are approximately 60 seconds each.
The title character of The Pizza Head Show commercial skits. Mr. Peanut: Planters snacks: 1916–present: Popsicle Pete: Popsicle ice pops: 1940s–1995: Honeycomb Kid: Post Cereals' Honeycomb cereal: 1960s (Cowboy) 1980s (Kid) The Crazy Craving: debuted 1990s: Bernard, the Bee Boy 2010 Sugar Bear: Post Cereals' Golden Crisp cereal: 1949–present
Barry Bear is a laid back grizzly bear who commonly enjoys funk music and has a very deep voice. He is also a disco artist and has made multiple songs. He is a parody of Barry White. Bear Masha and the Bear: A brown bear which is the little girl, Masha's, best friend. Bear WordWorld: A bear that is made up of the words B, E, A and R. Bear
A funny ad goes a long way, or at least it did for two amateur advertisers who won Doritos' "Crash the Super Bowl" contest in 2009, an ad contest where the winning commercial was played during the ...
With so many kinds of bears, it was a breeze to come up with 75 bear puns that are un-bear-ably funny. Share them around the campfire (along with your camping Instagram captions), entertain your ...
Determined to have the best Super Bowl commercial, FedEx researched past Super Bowl commercials and found 10 things that they believe will help them win, all of which are included in this ad: a celebrity (Burt Reynolds), an animal (a bear), a dancing animal (still the bear), a cute kid, a groin kick, a talking animal (still the bear ...
Here are 20 of the Super Bowl ads we thought were the most unforgettable, thanks to their heartwarming, funny, sad, or just downright weird concepts. Coca-Cola: "Mean Joe Greene" (1980)
"There is a bear in the woods" continues to be a popular phrase to invoke when a potential problem looms on the horizon, especially in political circles. The ad was copied in the 2004 presidential campaign of Republican George W. Bush in an ad called "Wolves," which sought to draw parallels between terrorists and timber wolves .