Saturday, March 13, 2010

Infomercials Prey on the Weak and the Tired

The other night I was watching TV at 2:30 a.m., as is my custom. At that time of night, your choices are limited to bad movies, gossip shows and infomercials. None of these choices are good but the infomercials can be entertaining, at times. The one with Mr. T. is kind of funny and when you come across a Time Life CD collection, it's good viewing. Hearing 10 seconds of every song, from a given decade, is a pleasant way to pass the early morning hours.

If you get tired enough, the products in these commercials start to seem useful, even necessary and excellent value too. Why wouldn't you want two Slap Chops for the price of one? And, if they're willing to throw in a Graty, all the better! Let's face it, Vince could sell condoms to a nun.

Like I was saying, the other night I was watching some late-night TV and I saw, quite possibly, the most ridiculous infomercial yet! It was for a piece of exercise equipment. One of those core machines, I can't remember the name, where you sit and rotate the top half of your body and the bottom half of your body in opposite directions.

Naturally, there were shots of very fit and healthy people swinging their bodies back and forth, on this contraption, in an effort to convince the weak and the fatigued that we too can have a core of steel. The individual exercisers became a group, each with a machine, still twisting vigorously, enjoying each other's company whilst improving their lives with this indispensable piece of equipment.

Then, without warning, the group was in front of the Eiffel Tower! The Eiffel Tower? Of course, why wouldn't you and an ensemble of your closest friends do an ab workout with a major European landmark as your backdrop? This group of 'athletes' didn't see anything strange about it, or if they did, they certainly didn't let on.

Just because you have access to a green-screen, doesn't mean you have to use it. It was such an incongruous image. First I laughed and then I realised my intelligence was being insulted, just a little bit. Even at 2:30 a.m. I had the mental agility to leap from humour to offence. They thought I was a sucker!

So I phoned the number on the screen, to complain about the ridiculous premise of the advertisement and ask them if they actually took me for an idiot, and they talked me into buying the machine.

No. That last part didn't actually happen.

8 comments:

  1. I hate infomercials! Happy Saturday Sharefest! Stopping by to say hi.

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  2. Thanks for the laugh today Jen, I needed it. I am very thankful that I am in bed before midnight so I do not have to put myself through informercials.

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  3. lol. I feel the same way...

    Stopping by from SITS.

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  4. Oh my gosh. I am a crazy fan of infomercials. I think my favorite part about them is how flustered people look when they try to, say, shove four cucumbers at a time in anything that isn't a Jack LeLanne Power Juicer. Or trying to strain a boiling pot of spaghetti with their bare fingers. Thought I would share this with you....
    http://www.cracked.com/article_15768_as-seen-tv-10-most-laughably-misleading-ads.html
    Stopping by from SITS!

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  5. haha awesome. I love to hate infomercials and I am hell bent on never buying anything from one... however I am guilty of googling some things and finding them online. :)

    Thanks for stopping by my blog!

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  6. you have awards waiting on my blog!
    http://lollipopsandpickles.blogspot.com/2010/03/awards.html

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  7. I think the fitness gadget infomercial market preys mostly on the desperate. What I find most fascinating is how after losing 10, no 20, wait! 30 pounds effortlessly in as little as two weeks, the models always have their after pictures taken in the same outfit they wore for their before photos, and they are still form-fitting.

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