Despite
the absence of cryptocurrency ads, this year's Super Bowl still managed some geek-friendly advertisements. There was even a riff on "the
classic intro from the
Super Mario Bros. Super Show, the live-action series that ran from 1989-1991,"
according to Kotaku: the infamous Mario Rap, which advertised Mario's plumbing business (and
in its 2023 version featured the URL for a website).
[T]hat website is indeed up and running, and is everything you would hope it would be from a struggling small business servicing the Brooklyn and Queens areas. There's excessive animation, broken image links, a careers page (still under construction, sadly) and even a novelty mouse cursor.
Kotaku's article includes both versions of the rap, along with reactions from Twitter. (Apparently the phone number in the advertisement really works).
There were also several ads from major tech companies. Google purchased
a long ad touting their Pixel phone's ability to remove people from photos (starring Amy Schumer, Doja Cat, and Giannis Antetokounmpo), while Workday drew attention to its
enterprise-grade finance and HR software with
an ad in which actual rock stars like Ozzy Osbourne, Joan Jett, blues player Gary Clark and members of KISS all urged the software's corporate users to stop calling themselves "rock stars".
Other tech-company ads aired from
E*Trade,
SquareSpace, and a
star-studded Uber One ad in which rapper Puff Daddy
auditions singers for their new jingle.
There were also the obligatory celebrity reunions — like
Snoop Dogg and Martha Stewart, or the
actors from Breaking Bad. But for comic book geeks, a trailer for D.C.'s new movie
The Flash included a surprise appearance by Batman — play by both Ben Affleck and by a 71-year-old Michael Keaton, a full 34 years after Keaton played the caped crusader in Tim Burton's 1989 movie
Batman. "Worlds collide in The Flash when Barry uses his superpowers to travel back in time in order to change the events of the past," according to a press release
cited by People.
James Gunn, director of Guardians of the Galaxy and new co-CEO of DC Studios, recently said, according to Deadline, that The Flash "is probably one of the greatest superhero movies ever made." He added that the film's storyline "resets everything" for the franchise.
The last Blockbuster video rental store in America played its own advertising prank during the Super Bowl. They announced their own ad which could only be viewed on their Instagram feed during halftime -- or in person at their store in Bend, Oregon. But, as CNN
points out, "the store is also renting VHS copies of it for $2."
And for those geeks concerned about the drawbacks of climate change-fighting vehicles, RAM trucks ran an ad about "
Premature Electrification" — for consumers excited about electric vehicles but "lacking the confidence about getting and being able to keep a charge." (Although a disclaimer printed at the bottom of the ad warned "Get excited, but not too excited. Pre-production model shown. Availability in the U.S. expected late 2024. Range lengthening technology to come later.")