Verizon Family Values
From the "I don't get why this ad is supposed to make me want to buy
your product" department, I bring you the latest ad for Verizon
wireless plans. As you're probably aware, Verizon offers a program
called "in", which means you can talk free to other people who are
also "in" the Verizon network without using any of your plan minutes.
Okay, so the commercial in question goes like this (I'm doing this
from memory, so these aren't exact quotes):
Father (to approx. middle-school aged kids): Guess what, kids! I
got us all cell phones from Verizon's family plan! No we can talk
to each other all we want!
(Kids stare blankly).
Mother: It's also got "in," so you can talk to your friends all you
want, too!
Kids: Yay!
Father: Yay! Family hug. (Kids grab the phones and run off, all
happy-like. Obviously, hugging is not in the cards.)
Father: (pretty much looking out at the cloud of dust left behind
by the kids) Uh, well, okay. Uh, call me!
Okay, two things about this commercial that are just weird.
First, what's the difference between a "family plan" and "in"? Isn't
the former just a subset of the latter? If everyone who's "in" can
just talk to everyone else who's "in," and all your family members
are, by definition, also "in," doesn't that render the whole concept
of "family plan" redundant? "I can talk to my family all I want... oh,
and that also applies to everyone else in the country on the Verizon
network too."
Second -- and the real reason I wanted to comment on this commercial
-- how sad is the premise? How dysfunctional must this family be, and
why then would you want to get a Verizon plan if that's the kind of
family that gets them? The kids can't even muster up the energy to
feign emotion when Daddy announces the acquisition of phones. "Ooo, we
get to talk to Daddy. Woo hoo." But when Mommy puts it in proper
context -- "and all your friends, too!" -- suddenly they're all
excited. That's just rude and disrespectful.
And then to top it off, the kids don't even thank anyone for the
phones. They just run off like greedy little rat bastards, screaming
"me me me" and taking what they get and not even acknowledging that
they possibly didn't do jack shit to deserve a cell phone.
Finally, the commercial ends with the poor dad, having been royally
dissed now, reduced to a pathetic charicature of a man, saying, "Call
me." I mean, that's just pitiful. The kids weren't that enthusiastic
about talking to you on the phone in the first place, dude. Then they
dissed your idea for a frigging hug. Apparently the only way you're
ever going to exchange two words with those bratty little kids of
yours is if you go over to where one of their friends live and call
them from that phone, because that's the only time they'll get excited
when the phone rings. They sure won't get excited when the call is
from you.
***
Oh yeah, that there's that other commerical. I think it's also from
Verizon. Parents dropping off their kids at college, and the father
says, "Don't forget to call." "Sure," says prodigal son, "I got your
number right here, Dad." (He starts scrolling through all the names in
his cell phone's memory, and the parents just stand there, and it soon
becomes obvious that the home phone number isn't in there. In fact, (I
guess for humorous effect), the kid stops once or twice, as if to say,
"Aha! There's the number!", only to find that it's not. He even
mutters once, "Oh yeah, gotta call her back...."
Why do you have to have your parents' number stored in your cell
phone? Do you not know it from regular memory? If we presume that this
kid is a freshman and that he lived with his parents up until he
started school, why are you unable to just say, "Sure Dad. I know the
number."? Why must you search for it?
The saddest part is -- I actually have a Verizon cell phone. But in my
defense, I got it before these commercials came out.
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