Meet the Parents: Who Knew the Jeep Wrangler Was Human?

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

Humanizing animals is the easiest way to help kids sympathize with the plight of small, cuddly forest creatures, and thus the easiest way to turn them into staunch environmentalists. People do this because it works. It’s easy, and it sticks. How many non-hunters picture Bambi’s ill-fated mother when they consider taking up the outdoorsman life? Probably quite a few.

In the auto realm, humanization of cars is mainly the domain of Disney and Pixar and schlocky horror directors. Movies like The Love Bug, Cars, Christine, and The Car appeal to very different audiences, but they all succeed in humanizing their subjects to some degree. A car can be a living thing, menacing or cute, cuddly or lethal, if deep-pocketed filmmakers or marketing types desire it. We can even put ourselves in the shoes (brake shoes?) of a car.

Well, those deep-pocketed people have now humanized the Jeep Wrangler. It was born. It lives. It has a voice. But does it speak to you?

Jeep won plenty of kudos for what it chose to do with its mega-expensive Superbowl slot, and rightly so. It’s one of the best car commercials I’ve seen in ages. A simple, stripped-down ad that matter-of-factly trashes the “grandiose” manifestos put out by insecure automakers, the Superbowl spot showed a rugged vehicle doing what a rugged vehicle does best (and in one uninterrupted shot, no less).

The message was simple: Flowery language is unnecessary, and existential promises of what a vehicle can do/be are misleading. Just watch this.

In its new ad campaign, however, the redesigned-for-2018 Wrangler JL takes its self-promotion in a different direction. Jeep isn’t showing us what a Wrangler can do (even though it does, constantly), it’s having the Wrangler tell us about its life. We even see its parents. Sort of.

Titled “Freedom and Adventure,” the ad, narrated by a gravel-voiced man seemingly borrowed from past Ram commercials, showcases a life through a series of film clips dating back to World War 2. “This is my story,” he growls, speaking both as the Wrangler (and its Willys ancestor) and as a man conceived by a “gung-ho” American G.I. and his free-spirited bride.

“I was born in a hurry,” he continues. “The world made war. My parents made love, and I screamed into life.”

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

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  • MeJ MeJ on Mar 14, 2018

    I like both commercials, but the second one would have been better with no talking at all.

  • Garrett Garrett on Mar 14, 2018

    His parents made love? It was a bit more complicated. In reality, Bantam got cuckolded and Willys and Ford lived happily ever after.

  • Slavuta I don't know how they calc this. My newest cars are 2017 and 2019, 40 and 45K. Both needed tires at 30K+, OEM tires are now don't last too long. This is $1000 in average (may be less). Brakes DYI, filters, oil, wipers. I would say, under $1500 under 45K miles. But with the new tires that will last 60K, new brakes, this sum could be less in the next 40K miles.
  • BeauCharles I had a 2010 Sportback GTS for 10 years. Most reliable car I ever own. Never once needed to use that super long warranty - nothing ever went wrong. Regular maintenance and tires was all I did. It's styling was great too. Even after all those years it looked better than many current models. Biggest gripe I had was the interior. Cheap (but durable) materials and no sound insulation to speak of. If Mitsubishi had addressed those items I'm sure it would have sold better.
  • Marty S I learned to drive on a Crosley. Also, I had a brand new 75 Buick Riviera and the doors were huge. Bent the inside edge of the hood when opening it while the passenger door was open. Pretty poor assembly quality.
  • 3-On-The-Tree Alan, I was an Apache pilot and after my second back surgery I was medically boarded off of flying status due to vibrations, climbing on and off aircraft, so I was given the choice of getting out or re-branching so I switched to Military Intel. Yes your right if you can’t perform your out doesn’t matter if your at 17 years. Dad always said your just a number, he was a retired command master chief 25 years.
  • ToolGuy "Note that those vehicles are in direct competition with models Rivian sells"• I predict that we are about to hear why this statement may not be exactly true
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