I have just returned from my holiday escapade to Ukraine. A good time was had by all and lots of great food and alcohol were consumed, without any casualties (that I know of). Speaking of which – this was the third year in a row I took note of the same disturbing tendency. The period leading up to Christmas and New Year brings with it a spike in the amount of TV commercials for products that help you deal with side effects of too much food and alcohol.
Some of these commercials follow a relatively reasonable format of “Did you make the mistake of eating/drinking way too much? Here’s a pill to help you deal with it!”. However, a few ads take the leap into “WTF?!” realm and target a more insane category of people who apparently participate in some obscure competitive sport of “Eating Too Fucking Much While Still Staying Alive”. Here’s an example (sorry for the quality, the only one I could find on Youtube):
[youtube.com/watch?v=f_dAeAS-itI]
For those of you who don’t speak Ukrainian and are also sane, allow me to recap the intricate “plot” of this commercial. An older couple are visiting their daughter and son-in-law. They sit down to eat. The father is just about to stuff his face with a food item, when his wife turns to him and, in a panicked whisper, says: “Vasya, we’ve forgotten the most important thing!”. Hmmm…what is it? Did they miss their insurance payment or forget to bring presents? Have they left their other kids inside a running dishwasher at home?
No, it’s worse than that! Vasya was about to eat without first taking an anti-crapping pill (I’m pretty sure that’s the proper scientific term). How else is he supposed to out-eat that skinny smartass son-in-law of his?! Vasya slides some pills across the table with a smug “your move, skinny smartass” expression. But wait, the skinny smartass takes out some pills of his own…and they are the enhanced version! Well played, four-eyes! The father-in-law is so impressed with this move that he immediately pours praise on the son-in-law and admits his own defeat. Everyone laughs because taking pills is quite obviously hilarious. The…end (?!)
If the above does not accurately describe every New Year’s family dinner you’ve ever had, then you’re clearly not a basket-case marketing person who came up with this abomination of a commercial. This ad isn’t about someone who got a bit carried away at a dinner party and in the heat of the moment ate too much or consumed something they shouldn’t have. This ad is about people who are so shitty at making life decisions that they already know they’ll eat way more than they can naturally handle. Drugs are their only hope for a night that doesn’t end in an emergency Gastric lavage.
Thankfully, this commercial is thoroughly made fun of by TV shows and people in general. Less thankfully, there are many other commercials of this type, including one for magical water that eliminates the bad effects of alcohol and meals on your stomach and saves you from constipation and diarrhoea alike.
I don’t know about you, but I take pills as an absolutely last resort, and most definitely not in anticipation of an out-of-control dinner. To those who do find yourselves in a situation where taking pre-meal pills becomes a habit, here’s a thought: try the well-tested technique of “stopping to eat when feeling full” and “not being freaking crazy”. Or, you know, have some magical stomach-saving water…
This is the crappiest, or rather anti-crappiest post I’ve seen. I shamelessly laughed at the people in the commercial, which caused me great remorse. So I sincerely prayed, “Sweet Jesus help them all.” I’m waiting for the day when stomach pumping devices are available over the counter. Then we can all keep the tubing attached day and night year round. We will have the freedom to stuff our guts until our brains burst, and finally get off the pills!!!
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@BakedAlaskaInOr Hear hear, we as the people demand natural remedies for overeating! No more of your chemicals! Stomach pumps for everybody in 2016!
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@Daniel Nest
I’m so pleased to have your stomach pumping support. After all, this over-eating-oinking-pill popping phenomenon is universal, and we need a simpler solution. The only foreseeable tiny, ity-bity possible problem might be when we all have our very own personal stomach pumps, there could soon follow a world wide food shortage. What then? Just “food” for thought.
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@BakedAlaskaInOr Then the ground is finally ripe for the much tooted zombie apocalypse! It will be glorious!
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This is the crappiest, or rather anti-crappiest post I’ve seen. I shamelessly laughed at the people in the commercial, which caused me great remorse. So I sincerely prayed,” Sweet Jesus help them all.” I’m just waiting for the day when stomach pumping devices are available over the counter. Then we can all keep the tubing attached day and night year round. We’ll have the freedom to stuff our guts until our brains burst, and finally get off the pills!!! NestExpressed
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You have some good points and some way ‘out there’ points 🙂 I smiled when I saw the TVC, it has a sense of irony if you ask me. But then again I am too much into marketing – so I’ll just ask you what I asked myself: if you had to market these pills with a TV commercial, what would you do? Hahaha perhaps best not to answer LOL in any case, people do overeat during the season – and in my opinion not because they are all stupid, but perhaps because some food is only made during this season so they really want to make the best of it!? 🙂
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@Lana Stankovic Agreed, people who overeat aren’t all stupid. Which is exactly why I wouldn’t display folks to whom I attempt to sell my products as bumbling food-obsessed village stereotypes that actually compete on who has the best pills to fight diarrhoea (and who take these pills BEFORE the dinner).
I’ve had my share of too much drinking and overeating in the moment, but never has it occurred to me to take preventive drugs to cancel out the poor decisions I’m PLANNING on making…
By the way, no offence to marketers in general – you may recall we’ve finished the same International Marketing and Management line at CBS 😉
Thanks for commenting!
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Wow. I can’t say that I’ve seen ads for anti-crapping pills (technical term, definitely) in the US, but that’s hilarious. And disturbing. Love your take on it!
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@lexcade Yup, it’s a crazy world! 🙂 Glad you liked the post
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@lexcade They’re called Imodium, but, according to the advertising, are meant for those occasions when you can’t get more than a hundred yards from your front door without having to run back home to crap again. They give you a longer “leash” on life…
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@AuthorMartyB @lexcade Extending your radius of operations, increasing your stomach capacity…is there anything these pills can’t do?!
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@Daniel Nest @lexcade Well, eventually you’ll probably want to switch to diet pills to reduce your radius… otherwise, you’ll no longer be able to reach your “operations”…
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