QOTD: Can Hollywood Sell You a Car?

Matthew Guy
by Matthew Guy

Ages ago, we asked about your favorite car-related marketing campaign. Your answers were varied as they were well-thought out – Nissan’s toy 300ZX, Iacocca daring us to find a better car, and VW’s Star Wars ad.

Absent from all of the above? Celebrity endorsements… unless you count Ken & Barbie in the Z ad. This time around, we’re asking you what’s the most memorable car ad (for better or worse) featuring someone straight out of central casting?

For sheer impact, I’ve got to point towards VW and one of the many instalments in their fantastically self-deprecating “Think Small” campaign. Sure, the Lemon and Live Below Your Means ads made for fantastic copy; showing a towering basketball player next to a funny-looking import car must’ve taken more than a few animated conversations in smoky conference rooms.

Don’t limit your musings to American car ads featuring famous stars, either. In the late Eighties, smack-dab in the middle of Back to the Future II & III fever and right at the end of Family Ties, a youthful Michael J. Fox showed up in a Japanese-market ad for the 1989 Honda Integra.

Eighties music, inexplicable somersaults, and a dash of well-rehearsed Japanese? Super.

What’s your pick for a memorable car ad with a celebrity entering stage left? There’s one for sure I hope someone mentions; it’s for a domestic sedan — that’s all I’ll say.

Matthew Guy
Matthew Guy

Matthew buys, sells, fixes, & races cars. As a human index of auto & auction knowledge, he is fond of making money and offering loud opinions.

More by Matthew Guy

Comments
Join the conversation
3 of 69 comments
  • CarnotCycle CarnotCycle on Oct 23, 2017

    I'm sure its been mentioned already, but Ringo Starr shilling for "not your father's" Oldsmobiles is still just as vivid and tacky in memory as day I saw it twenty or whatever years ago.

    • PrincipalDan PrincipalDan on Oct 23, 2017

      All of those Oldsmobile commercials were terrible except for Leonard Nimoy's (cause come on Spock). It did inspire Ray Stevens to sing "This IS your Daddy's Oldsmobile" (Don't it look good, don't it smell good, don't you love the way it feels?) Likely that campaign would have sold more Olds.

  • Lorenzo Lorenzo on Oct 25, 2017

    If you're old enough, you remember the early days of TV when sponsors owned the shows - the networks couldn't produce content. As a result, the stars of the shows did the ads, like Phil Silvers selling Lucky Strike cigarettes, and Ed Wynn appearing in gasoline ads. (Just google the names) GM had a couple shows sponsored by Chevrolet, the Dinah Shore Chevy Show, and Bonanza. For product endorsement, you can't beat Dinah Shore singing the show's theme song, "See the USA in your Chevrolet..." unless it's the voice of Lorne Greene pronouncing MONNN-za.

  • ToolGuy No hybrid? No EV? What year is this? lolI kid -- of course there is an electric version.
  • Tassos No, this is for sure NOT my favorite Caddy. Very few Caddys with big fins work out as designs.FOr interiors, I much prefer the Caddys and other US luxury cars from the 30s, Packards etc. After the war, they ditched the generous wood veneer (without which no proper luxury car) for either nothing or the worse than nothing fake wood.For exterior, I like many Caddys from the 60s and early 70s, when the fins slowly diminished and finally disappearedEven the current " Art and Science" angular styling is quite good and has lasted a quarter century (from the first CTS). They even look better than most Bangled BMWs and even some Mercs.- from outside only.
  • ToolGuy Good for them.
  • ToolGuy "I'm an excellent driver."
  • Tassos If a friend who does not care about cars asks me what to buy, I tell her (it usually is a she) to get a Toyota or a Lexus. If she likes more sporty cars, a Honda or a MiataIf a friend is a car nut, they usually know what they want and need no help. But if they still ask me, I tell them to get a Merc or AMG, a 911, even an M3 if they can fix it themselves. If they are billionaires, and I Do have a couple of these, a Ferrari or an even more impractical Lambo.
Next