Commercials are never really the best content you can see on TV, but there are some that are better than others. The problem is, they have to be either REALLY good or REALLY bad if you want them to be memorable. It's a choice that marketing teams have to make, and it seems like in the 90s, everyone went for the really bad option.
It seemed like they all embraced the cheesy and ridiculous methods that would get people's attention and I guess technically it worked. Twenty years later we are still trying to figure out why they made these commercials the way they did.
This kid seems really greedy...
Okay, this is just rude? You can't climb into someone's car even if they cut you off.
Even the commercial for this gives me anxiety
You probably shouldn't eat something that glows in the dark?
I mean, I could eat pizza anytime whether or not it's on a bagel, but still a catchy tune
Barq's has bite, I get it.
Hey Jack, you are not just like every other dad, your head is a weird ping pong ball with a hat on it?
If you can believe it, they just keep getting weirder...
Watch out kid! There is a spooky stranger in the park, please don't go with him??
Coco Pops really stepped it up to the next level of strange with this one
What do you think your cat would say if they could call you?
Simple question: Why?
I know the commercial is ridiculous, but I still miss this cereal
Pizza Hut made a lot of these "Pizza Head" commercials and every single one of them was super weird
How many of these do you remember from your childhood?
The cartoon that defined our Saturday mornings growing up picked up where the classic Warner Bros. cartoons left off, with a new cast of characters inspired by our old favorites.But we bet there's a lot you never knew about this classic series. Here are 13 tiny but toony facts about the show.1. The animator's followed the "Mother's House" ruleUnlike the original Warner Bros. cartoons, you never saw characters pointing guns at each other in Tiny Toon Adventures. But you also didn't see many characters being hit with chairs, smacked with rolling pins, or threatened with knives.Warner Bros.
The former child star, Jon Paul Steuer, who made a successful career for himself after leaving the entertainment industry has died. He was 33-years-old at the time of his passing. Steuer (also known as Jonny P. Jewels) was only three when he first asked his mother about acting. After modeling for several months, Steuer actually leapt onto a stage when a role became open, and a talent agent decided to sign the spunky little kid. Alchetron"I had never really gotten into acting for the stardom or the fame or the attention," he would later say. "I did it because
Of course the 80s had a bunch of huge stars. The Brat Pack dominated the magazines, Tom Cruise was in all the most popular movies, and Michael J. Fox had time traveled into our hearts, but there was one man who was in many of your favorite movies even though he wasn't as huge of a name.Steve Guttenberg started his career in 1978, but it was in the 80s that he truly became a star. When he starred in Police Academy, everyone realized just how great he was. He made the sequel for that, followed by Cocoon, which was