One Sunday near the beginning of every year, network television offers nearly three hours of unparalleled excitement and entertainment. Each year, viewers ride waves of emotion, laughing, crying, at times spluttering with indignation, as a new and magical scene unfolds before them. The only catch is that you have to sit through a (usually mediocre) football game in order to be a part of it all.
Super Bowl ads represent some of America's most notable characteristics: creativity, innovation, and startling amounts of blatantly hyped, disgusting uber-consumerism. This year I spotted a new trend. The automotive industry seems to have stepped up its efforts toward eco-friendliness (of course there were certain exceptions). It began before the end of the first quarter with an ad we'd already heard about and continued from there. Some SUV ads boasted about fuel economy; GM (who owns Hummer, for what it's worth…) chimed in with a pitch for Ethanol 85 – a corn based alternative fuel; and in an ad for the Ford Escape Hybrid, Kermit the Frog discovered that it is easy being green, after all.
Considering the President's recent State of the Union speech, I'm tempted to think that something is actually changing; people who I never thought would acknowledge a problem with burning fossil fuels are – at least superficially – looking for solutions. I have to admit, some of my cynicism has been brushed away by the fact that these costly ads were meant to be seen by everybody who watches the Super Bowl – nearly half of all Americans. It seems that, from even the most pessimistic point of view, mainstream society is opening up to a discussion about cars and the environment. What do you think? Is the auto industry coming around, or are these companies sprucing up their images because they smell a different type of green? And if so, is that bad, as long as they do make changes? Let us know in the comment board below.
Finally, the automotives are stepping up. Let’s give them some credit and not criticize them. If a company wants to change, I say let them in!!
Nothing like a little supply and demand to drive an economy.
Gas is hard to come by. Gas is expensive. Demand for a cheaper alternative arises. Companies suddenly look for a new supply.
The price at the pump dictates all. Which is why the rest of the developed world has a gas tax. Adopting one in this country would be progressive and daring. This latest glance toward more efficient fuels is neither. it’s just capitalism being capitalism.
Loved the Hummer ad. Two monsters crushing the planet to death…giving birth to a gas guzzling monster… that, too, ruins the planet.
You can take a small step that will go a long way to stop the biggest political and environmental threat we face today. You don’t have to spend money. You don’t have to volunteer your time.
All you have to do is join with hundreds of thousands of other concerned global citizens in the Virtual March to Stop Global Warming.
www.stopglobalwarming.org
It’s a non-political effort that was launched in April 2005 with Senator John McCain and Robert F Kennedy Jr. to move across the United States via the Internet from one town to the next presenting evidence of the effects of global warming while highlighting peoples concerns and solutions along the way.
Join the Virtual March www.StopGlobalWarming.org. Be with David Whiteside, Walter Cronkite, former CIA director James Woolsey and the millions of others who demand action when the Virtual March reaches Washington, D.C. on Earth Day 2006.
www.stopglobalwarming.org