I don’t know if you’re familiar with Toffifee. It’s a sort of over-packaged nutty caramel confection that a distant relative might buy a grandparent for Christmas, or that might be the only product you recognise if you visit a German supermarket.
In a move common to all European confectionary when it’s advertised in the UK, Toffifee released a new TV advert a couple of months ago that has somehow made it on to the airwaves without anyone involved realising that it looks at least 30 years out of date. Presumably nobody involved in the entire campaign had any sense of irony.
This post isn’t really about anything other than my need to share with you just how naff the whole thing is.
In the advert, a bowl of generic sweets is shown, representing a nightmare world where different sweets have different ingredients and flavours. We are then introduced, one at a time, to four members of an alleged family, each of whom likes a specific thing. They are shown superimposed on the thing they apparently like to eat.
First is Boy, who likes caramel. Being superimposed over caramel causes him great pleasure, though he isn’t actually looking at the caramel.
Next is Dad. Dad absolutely loves a hazelnut, to the extent that footage of giant hazelnuts tumbling over each other in slow motion makes him rub his hands together in a way that literally nobody does in real life. (I hope this guy got paid well for throwing himself in to this badly conceived role.)
Now it’s the turn of Girl, whose purpose is to look enigmatic over some slow-moving brown sludge. Apparently the sludge is nougat cream, which is a very specific and esoteric thing for anyone to choose as their favourite thing, let alone a ten year old girl.
Finally, here’s Mum. Mum is visibly astonished by the existence of some fairly ordinary looking chocolate. It’s not clear why she bothers with Toffifee when she could just eat some chocolate instead.
Following that montage, the family are seen at home, where Mum opens a box of Toffifee on the sofa and everyone instantly gathers round, eats one and shows visible signs of having fun. They have been saved from the tyranny of having to eat four different things that are their favourites by this wonderful sweet that combines small amounts of all four things in a sort of sugary family compromise.
If you can believe such a thing, Storck Brands paid £1.8m to produce and air this advert. Thankfully its run on TV ended earlier this month.
13 comments on “Badvert”
I think its telling that in googling in order to find some witty angle to reply, all I could find are websites talking about a press release about an advert. Riveting. I did find this one from the 1908’s though, I know how much you both seem to love the 80’s.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FsPWztqJ_gY
Is it wrong to say that I’d love to “have a go” on the mum in this advert?
Nah, you can say that. Maybe not to her face, but you can say it here.
Would you woo her by drizzling melted chocolate on a bar of Bourneville?
Welcome to the Beans mini Choose Your Own Adventure.
You have three choices for Ian’s answer:
1) The semi-smart answer
2) The weird answer
3) The downright disgusting, degrading and filthy hound dog answer.
2
Yeah, 2. Nobody needs 3.
Wooing a lady requires three things: a) hip shoulders, b) a sexy backing track and c) drizzable materials.
Once I hit my stride, she’ll be unable to resist my moves.
If you had hip shoulders, would you not also have legs for arms?
I don’t know if ladies go for that. All the drizzling in the world won’t save you if you go in for a hug with a pair of misplaced legs or you attempt to tenderly stroke her face with your sweaty feet.
Given that I’m the most successful out of all three of us when it comes to the ladies, given my proven (?) track record and many happy years (?) of marriage (?), if I say that hugging lovely ladies with legs where arms should be will work then it will work. Guaranteed.
In that case I will sit back and wait to be schooled.
Damn right, fool.