The Real Message Behind Audi’s Super Bowl Ad Isn’t Exactly An Uplifting One

Will Truman

Will Truman is the Editor-in-Chief of Ordinary Times. He is also on Twitter.

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91 Responses

  1. LeeEsq says:

    Me thinks he is over thinking things.Report

    • Stillwater in reply to LeeEsq says:

      We live in a post modern world, dude. There is no overthinking things.Report

    • Stillwater in reply to LeeEsq says:

      I find it personally offensive. As an owner of one of the first 2009-model-year Audi S5s to set tire on American soil,

      No signaling in that sentence tho!

      But he’s a reliable purveyor of an “everyman ideology”, tho, yeah? Sure.

      Post modernism all the way down.Report

      • Jaybird in reply to Stillwater says:

        See? You can’t unsee it. Even if you’d like to.Report

        • Stillwater in reply to Jaybird says:

          Post modernism will be the death of us all.

          Add: I’m feeling a bit bad about the obliqueness of that comment, but feel it’s equally as oblique as yours, so we’re all square. 🙂Report

          • Stillwater in reply to Stillwater says:

            Actually, I take that back. I’m critiquing someone who’s critiquing someone else’s work. Which is pretty consistent with what (I THINK, anyway…) you’re referring too.

            So by that standard, you gotta do some work to establish that the original critique deserves any serious consideration. Non post-modernly, of course. 🙂Report

            • Jaybird in reply to Stillwater says:

              See? You can’t unsee it.

              Even if you’d like to.Report

              • Stillwater in reply to Jaybird says:

                Yeah, I can’t help but see that post-modernist meta-analysis is a bunch of whooey.

                I’ve been pretty consistent on that since you and I started arguing together here at the ole OT.

                I also thought that you, once upon a time, thought that subjective definitions of reality were also problematic for policy, culture and governance, what with all the emphasis on “testability” and so on.Report

              • Jaybird in reply to Stillwater says:

                There’s a lot of reality that is nothing but subjective. There’s a lot of it that we say is testable because we don’t want to deal with the fact that our tests are based in a handful of assumptions/axioms that are, themselves, untestable. So we make it testable within our framework of what is testable, but, there are a lot of assumptions that are shared that make those results acceptable.

                There’s fewer and fewer of those assumptions left.

                Guess how many of them are left within the field of… what would we say this commercial is in the field of?

                Sociology?Report

              • Stillwater in reply to Jaybird says:

                So, I take that as you abandoning, and obliquely apologizing for, your reflexive emphasis on “testability” over the last six years whenever a liberal would propose a policy you don’t like.

                Fair enough.

                I’m not talking about that tho. I’m talking about rejecting the idea that person gets to make their own semantics for a word, or their own meaning for an action, on the premise that there are NO objective meanings in words or actions and reality actually is subjectively defined.

                You can go down that road if you want to. I won’t.Report

              • Jaybird in reply to Stillwater says:

                “Testability” is limited to that which is repeatable.

                If you’re down with that, good. We can move on.

                I’m talking about rejecting the idea that person gets to make their own semantics for a word, or their own meaning for an action, on the premise that there are NO objective meanings in words or actions and reality actually is subjectively defined.

                There’s a level of that upon which you and I agree.

                There’s a level on this which you and I agree that we can’t agree. Like, not because we don’t want to, but, like, in theory.

                I’m down with us both keeping the former in mind as we interact knowing that the latter is the state of affairs.Report

              • Stillwater in reply to Jaybird says:

                “Testability” is limited to that which is repeatable.

                If you’re down with that, good. We can move on.

                No, I’m not willing to move on. One can test things at the cultural/political level, and one can test things at the objective level. Eg, even if a conservative is hitting another conservative in the knee with a hammer, it will break X% percent of the time, which turn out to be IDENTICAL to the % breakage inflicted by Democrats! (BSDI!!)

                Testability is a measure of what’s objectively true in the world, including the subjective (even false) beliefs people hold. Those can be just facts. Eg, supposing the evidence showed this, it would be a fact that 50+1% of the people believe the world is flat. But that test doesn’t establish that the world is flat.Report

              • Jaybird in reply to Stillwater says:

                Eg, supposing the evidence showed this, it would be a fact that 50+1% of the people believe the world is flat. But that test doesn’t establish that the world is flat.

                People didn’t believe that the world was flat. They more or less accurately measured the circumference of the earth back in the days of The Fathers.
                They believed that the earth was the center of the solar system/universe rather than some other setup.

                Anyway.

                Testability is a measure of what’s objectively true in the world, including the subjective (even false) beliefs people hold.

                False beliefs are chimeras.
                They have 12 or 13 different traits and if you prove 11 of them wrong without touching the other 1 or 2, those 1 or 2 will prove to have been the lynchpins of the belief and atheist god help you if those 1 or 2 are later independently found to be repeatable by more or less anybody with stuff found in their kitchens/garages.Report

              • Stillwater in reply to Jaybird says:

                False beliefs are chimeras.

                And so it goes with postmodernism.Report

              • Jaybird in reply to Stillwater says:

                I was using this definition. The repeatable one.

                Not the other one.Report

              • Stillwater in reply to Jaybird says:

                The other one is repeatable too:

                a thing that is hoped or wished for but in fact is illusory or impossible to achieve.

                🙂Report

              • Jaybird in reply to Stillwater says:

                As much as the other one might be repeatable when it comes to such outcomes as “illusory”, I was still using the one that I was using.Report

              • Stillwater in reply to Jaybird says:

                OK.

                {{You’re talking about a non-subjective word interpreted as not-text, right?}} 🙂Report

              • Jaybird in reply to Stillwater says:

                Dude. I’m drunk.Report

              • Stillwater in reply to Jaybird says:

                Me too. Dude, I’m not letting THAT get in the way of a good argument.

                Good might relative here, tho.Report

              • Jaybird in reply to Stillwater says:

                Dude. Relative? All that means is non-repeatable, right?Report

              • Stillwater in reply to Jaybird says:

                No, repeatable in the same circumstances.

                I got the score right, btw.Report

              • Jaybird in reply to Stillwater says:

                I only got the winner. And only under the assumption as if there were a system which would make sense were the fans be equally important around this time next year.Report

          • greginak in reply to Stillwater says:

            That isn’t post modern. That is bills to be paid so gotta put a piece together that is topical and generate clicks. Those Audi’s don’t buy themselves doncha know, well at least they don’t have a robot for that yet.Report

            • Stillwater in reply to greginak says:

              The commercial isn’t post-modern, but the analysis of it is. There are “messages” contained in the “text” which subvert … all that’s holy in our world.Report

              • greginak in reply to Stillwater says:

                It’s like i don’t’ even know what post-modern is supposed to mean anymore. The word is unmoored from any commonly agreed upon meaning………….ohhhhh mannnnn.,………head explodes.

                But really, its just bad media analysis.Report

              • Stillwater in reply to greginak says:

                It’s not the deconstruction of cultural reality, but objective reality. There is no semantic value you can assign to a term that ins’t a “text” which someone interprets as implying (oh, for example) the patriarchy. That’s why you get all the jokes about Newton’s Principia being nothing more than a tool of oppression created by the patriarchy.Report

              • Stillwater in reply to Stillwater says:

                Btw: I say that as someone who believes the patriarchy is real! It’s just that I don’t believe that an analysis of the patriarchy reduces to viewing words as “texts” but instead of the real, actual (non-linguistic) power imbalances that obtain in the world, regardless of how you “textualize” them.

                Hell, I could “textualize” them away, if I wanted to. Who’d be able to demonstrate I’m wrong with their “texts”???Report

              • Jaybird in reply to Stillwater says:

                Who’d be able to demonstrate I’m wrong with their “texts”???

                Who’d be able to demonstrate that you’re right?

                There ain’t no brakes on this train.Report

              • Stillwater in reply to Jaybird says:

                At least we know where we both stand on this issue. You, in the context of this argument with me, think subjectivity = reality.

                Fair enough.

                Add: I’ll remember that, tho, going forward. 🙂Report

              • Jaybird in reply to Stillwater says:

                Subjectivity == A proxy for reality.

                But, otherwise, awesome.Report

              • Richard Hershberger in reply to Stillwater says:

                My recollection, which could well be flawed, is that the claim is that Principia is a rape manual, and that this wasn’t meant as a joke.Report

              • Here’s the quotation in full (buy the book!):

                One phenomenon feminist historians have focused on is the rape and torture metaphors in the writings of Sir Francis Bacon and others (e.g. Machiavelli) enthusiastic about the new scientific method. Traditional historians and philosophers have said that these metaphors are irrelevant to the real meanings and referents of scientific concepts held by those who used them and by the public for whom they wrote. But when it comes to regarding nature as a machine, they have quite a different analysis: here, we are told, the metaphor provides the interpretations of Newton’s mathematical laws: it directs inquirers to fruitful ways to apply his theory and suggests the appropriate methods of inquiry and the kind of metaphyiscs the new theory supports. But if we are to believe that mechanistic metaphors were a fundamental component of the explanations the new science provided, why should we believe that the gender metaphors were not? A consistent analysis would lead to the conclusion that understanding nature as a woman indifferent to or even welcoming rape was equally fundamental to the interpretations of these new conceptions of nature and inquiry. Presumably these metaphors, too, had fruitful pragmatic, methodological, and metaphysical consequences for science. In that case, why is it not as illuminating and honest to refer to Newton’s laws as “Newton’s rape manual” as it is to call them “Newton’s mechanics”?

                Report

  2. notme says:

    Audi is the choice of the winners in today’s economy,

    So what? Doesn’t every product sell itself on supposedly making the buyer prettier, smarter, more popular or smell better?Report

  3. Kolohe says:

    America is supposed to be a democracy, but the only good halftime shows are from those with titles of nobility – Lady Gaga, Prince, Michael Jackson.Report

  4. fillyjonk says:

    I had to watch the ad a couple times on the tiny embedded youtube player to see the “stripper glitter” girl. At first I thought the Golden Daughter was her and I was all “Wait, she doesn’t have braces.”

    Eh, meh. I neither found it awful in the way the TTAC dude did, nor did I find it inspiring at all. Yeah, great, dad. You have an Audi. Hoo-ray and a tiger for you! You’re implying you’re a better person because of the car you chose?

    I found the ad deeply unconvincing. Then again: even when you win the rat race, you’re still surrounded by rats, so.

    I dunno. I remember catching more crap as a kid for a lot of things other than being a girl – being an egghead, having the wrong brand of jeans, being emotionally immature and crying easily. Most of my tormentors were fellow females. That may be why the “poor oppressed girls” rhetoric does not always work that well on me.Report

    • LeeEsq in reply to fillyjonk says:

      Girls and women seem to police their fellow girls and women more than boys and men. There are plenty of boys and men that get tormented by other boys and men for being off but it seems less deep and it doesn’t seem to have the those who deviate in the most minor way fashion.

      A few months ago I was riding the subway home from work and listened to two women speak very disapprovingly of another woman for dating the wrong type of man. The man’s offense? He was short. I can’t think of any similar incident happening with men.Report

      • fillyjonk in reply to LeeEsq says:

        I’ve long said that “girl bullying” (which consists largely of snide comments, backhanded compliments, shunning, and spreading rumors) is worse than “boy bullying.” Not all of my male friends agree with me on that.

        The worst boss I ever had in my life, years and years ago, was a woman. I think women take out their insecurities on other women; that was what was going on there.

        Another thought about the ad: I was probably unconvinced by it because I don’t see a car as a way to signal my virtue or worth as a person. What I want in a car is something that will reliably start up every time I need it to, something that is relatively safe to drive, something that won’t be ruinously expensive to maintain, and something I can haul field gear or a couple weeks’ worth of groceries in. So I’m probably not in Audi’s demographic.Report

      • Richard Hershberger in reply to LeeEsq says:

        A lot of the male version, back in the day, was about perceived or claimed perception of signs of gayness. Now that gayness is much more widely accepted, I wonder how that plays out.Report

  5. Saul Degraw says:

    Nothing makes me want to become a hermit more than an Internet round of “OMG wasn’t this a super-progressive commercial” followed by someone else saying “Wait actually……”

    Same thing happened with Budweiser….Report

    • Stillwater in reply to Saul Degraw says:

      And that’s why we have Trump.

      On the other hand, I hear ya. The meta culture fatigue kicks in an you just wanna give up.Report

      • Saul Degraw in reply to Stillwater says:

        @stillwater

        The funny thing is that I profess to be more capitalist friendly than many of the people I know who get teary-eyed at these ads. My view is that the purpose of an ad is to sell you a product and it will do so by any means necessary.Report

    • LeeEsq in reply to Saul Degraw says:

      Budweiser’s ad at least had a connection to company lore. It was a generic founder story even though it was completely inaccurate as actual history. The actual Adolphus Busch was born into a prosperous family and received a very good education by the standards of the time. The Audi ad is just soft pop liberal sentiment.Report

      • notme in reply to LeeEsq says:

        The Audi ad is just soft pop liberal sentiment.

        Who do you think buys audi’s? They were targeting their core market.Report

        • Murali in reply to notme says:

          Why wouldn’t conservative businessmen buy Audis? Upper middle class white men are still majority conservative. (IIRC upper middleclass white women too)Report

          • notme in reply to Murali says:

            I didn’t say that conservative businessman wouldn’t buy Audis. I merely stated my assumption that they aren’t the ones buying them currently. Kind of like Volvos, being more commonly associated with liberals. It would be an interesting survey. Let me also add that I didn’t think the ad carried the message that the author seems to think it does.Report

    • LeeEsq in reply to Saul Degraw says:

      The essay was written from an odd place politically. It was a combination of the American conservative disdain for coastal elites and classic left-leaning class politics against the wealthy along with Social Justice writing about body-shaming. There was a small but definite MRA tinge to it to.Report

  6. Kolohe says:

    History repeats itself, the first time as tragedy, the second as an American football game.Report

  7. I missed this one; must have gone to the bathroom at just the right time.

    What did people think about the BSDM T-Mobile ads? (My take: genius, but I’m glad I haven’t watched Bob’s Burgers recently.)Report

  8. Damon says:

    I missed all the good adds….I was chatting with the guests. Dammit. Based upon news reports, maybe the game was better than the ads this year 🙂

    BTW, both the ad and the analysis makes me NOT want to buy an Audi.Report

  9. Kim says:

    Booooring. Can’t you find an ad that causes people to get really worked up?
    Like, say, the one where they kidnap a baby?Report

  10. rtodkelly says:

    Years ago, back when I worked in an office of a big company, I used to hate the ‘water cooler talk’ about Super Bowl commercials the day after they game, in the same way I hated it when people at Super Bowl parties would tell me they were only there to watch the commercials, not the football game. I remember thinking at the time that surely there was nothing worse than having to hear hours of insipid talk about 30 second Madison Avenue adverts trying to sell you sugar water or cheap beer.

    Now I’m realizing that there is something worse than that: people having deep, serious, artistic and/or political conversations about 30 second Madison Avenue adverts trying to sell you sugar water or cheap beer.

    So, ya know, kudos to this writer who has just managed to cleverly crack Audi’s “people who buy our cars are better than other people” code — or as it’s also know, the basis of pretty much every car commercial ever in the history of the planet.Report

  11. DensityDuck says:

    I think my biggest problem with the commercial was the editing. None of the big actions scenes had time to breathe–every cut got exactly the same time. “Looking back and forth” reaction shots had just as much time as “drifting around a corner”. I had to watch twice to understand exactly what happened in the handle-brake “car-fu” bit, it’s just “she pulls the brake, then there’s…a dust cloud? Oh, she’s okay now.”Report

    • This has been a thing for years. Often you can find the 90-second version of the Super Bowl commercials online. It’s amazing how much better the longer versions are, mostly because of the freedom to edit better. One in particular that stuck out for me was the Mercedes ad with Willem Dafoe as the devil. The 60-second version got the message across and included all the famous people they had paid for but lacked any particular feel; the 90-second version felt like a little piece of properly-done art.Report

  12. Kim says:

    Have you seen the old Microsoft ad with Pamela Anderson?Report

  13. DensityDuck says:

    Oh, dear, I can’t find it anymore, but someone–I think it was The Last Psychiatrist, maybe at their sub-blog–wrote…

    “There are four stages of heroic fantasy. First, you *are* the hero. Then, you *become* the hero. Next, you *could* be the hero if you wanted or needed to. Finally, you *create* the hero.”

    The blog post then goes on to talk about how the demographics of American media consumers suggest that we should look for more fiction of the type where the main character is a mentor for (or savior of) a young person who, as a significant part of the story, performs some powerfully personal act of the sort which the main character advised them on earlier in the story. Often this person will be a girl, but generally they will be at least physically weak compared to the people causing them problems.

    This was done in the context of the movie “Hanna”, but it seems relevant to this Audi commercial.Report

  14. DensityDuck says:

    Oh, another thing about the Audi ad. Note the careful wording.

    “We believe in equal pay for equal work!” But wait, most of the women who work at Audi make less than most of the men, we can check the pay scales and see that–

    https://twitter.com/Audi/status/826937589366001664

    …oh. Well then.Report

    • fillyjonk in reply to DensityDuck says:

      So it’s not so much “we treat our employees well and here’s how,” it’s #webelieveinequalpayforequalwork.

      Yeah, that’s pretty much our world now.

      Virtue-signalling is much easier than actually being virtuous.Report