Picture the pitch for Peloton’s Holiday ad as a Madison Avenue advertising executive outlines the plot to the indoor bike brand’s marketing chiefs … On Christmas morning, a mother is led downstairs by her little girl to find her present from her husband waiting – a Peloton exercise bike; over the ensuing months as she pedals away, she films herself and surprises him with a video she has put together showing how much she’s enjoying the gift.
Heartwarming stuff, yes? Well, that’s not quite how the internet saw it. The video has been mercilessly deconstructed and the piss-taking has been relentless – you’ll find some of the best on our live blog.
There’s a particularly vicious takedown here on USA Today, which reflects a lot of the reaction to the 30-second spot, and the fact the husband apparently couldn’t even be arsed to stick so much as a bow on the bike is the least of it.
Setting aside the not-so-subtle message a man might be sending his wife by buying her an exercise bike of all things for Christmas, the woman’s face as she prepares to use the bike for the first time is a picture.
A picture not of delight, but rather a mixture of Brad Pitt’s face when he opens THAT box in Seven, and Emma Thompson’s in Love Actually when she realises her husband has given her a CD rather than the jewellery she had been expecting (the intended recipient of which is a much younger work colleague).
It’s almost as though the actress is fighting to contain her own reaction had she received a similar gift from her own partner.
Then, there’s the apparently sleepless nights, the relentless riding, the constant filming and finally the almost dutiful presentation of the video as she gratefully shows him that his $2,000 hasn’t gone to waste.
Of course, the unsaid premise to the ad could be that the woman had been dropping not-so-subtle hints to her husband that this is exactly what she wanted for Christmas, though if that is the case, it wasn't communicated.
But if the intended target market is men, to give them an alternative gift suggestion to, say, a Tiffany bracelet or a Louis Vuitton handbag, before parting with their cash they might be advised to consider this take on the ad from online comedian Eva Victor, best known for her Fleabag spoof which went viral earlier this year, and which suggests it could end up costing them way more than two grand.
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32 comments
What makes me negative about them is that there's something really irritating and alienating about their adverts. I have no view on the product, I doubt many of those mocking the company do. I don't see it does any harm, but it seems a rather generic, unoriginal product wrapped up in a lot of heavy-handedly 'aspirational' marketing (I mean, just look at the houses these beautiful yuppies apparently live in! It's the cynicism of it that's tiresome, the attempted implication that if you buy our product you must be one of these rich beautiful people!).
And the 'mens rights' defensiveness about any suggestion of sexism doesn't change the fact that this particular ad is indeed a bit dodgy in its sexual politics. I'd say it was more naff than offensive. Has any real woman ever behaved like this? It's consistent with all their marketing, as targetting some weirdly bright-eyed Stepford yuppy demographic.
She just looks *so* happy
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