I have noticed that TV commercials are leaving you with questions about the integrity of the company in which they represent.
There is a commercial for Heineken Light Beer which starts with an usher at a basketball game leading two men to their seats in the nose bleed section of the stadium. The crowd erupts from the action of the court and a man in a red shirt jumps up and knocks four beers out of another’s band. The beer spills on the seats of the two men being led up by the usher. One of the men says to the usher, “It all cool”, but the usher directs them to front row seats where they sit by an attractive woman and are offered free Heineken beer.
What about the guy who has his beer spilled. This guy had to walk down to the concession stand, stand in line and pay a premium price for the four beers, walk back up the stairs to his seat only to have the guy in the red shirt knock them out of his hand. The usher ignores this man altogether and plight. Is the man who had the beer knocks out of his hand less important that the two men just arriving at the arena? I guess he is less valuable to Heineken.
There is another beer commercial, I believe that it Miller Beer. The truck driver enters the stands at a horse track and he is mumbling about the people who are at the track to be seen. The driver walks into the box seats and starts re-boxing the beers out of the ice. The driver then states that these are beer is going to the people who desire them and he starts handing them out to people in the grandstand.
I do not know about you, but where I am from it is called stealing when you take from people who paid for a beer and give it to people who did not pay for them.
Is miller beer saying that they value some customer over others? Why would you value people who will drink your beer if it is free over people who may have bought their beer but may not drink it?
drink your beer if it is free over people who may have bought their beer but may not drink it?
The there is the Sprint commercial that place at the court room during a divorce hearing and the judge is a lumberjack. The verdict is for joint custody and the commercials shows the cutting everything in half including the house, painting and evens the family dog.
Based on the commercial, can you turn in a phone cut in half without penalty?