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* ''WebAnimation/HomestarRunner'' parodies this. It had previously been established that Homestar Runner's favorite drink is melonade, but in the cartoon "Hremail 7" he reveals that he's actually a paid spokesman for the company, and therefore contractually obligated to act obsessed with the product: "As a national spokesmodel for the Ethical Advancement of Melonade, I am contractually unable to drink, talk about, or bathe in any other liquid!" Homestar ends the Hremail by telling anyone who wants to know what his non-melonade favorite drink is, they need to ask him two years when his contract expires.

to:

* ''WebAnimation/HomestarRunner'' parodies this. It had previously been established that Homestar Runner's favorite drink is melonade, but in the cartoon "Hremail 7" he reveals that he's actually a paid spokesman for the company, and therefore contractually obligated to act obsessed with the product: "As a national spokesmodel for the Ethical Advancement of Melonade, I am contractually unable to drink, talk about, or bathe in any other liquid!" Homestar ends the Hremail by telling anyone who wants to know what his non-melonade favorite drink is, they need to ask him again in two years years, when his contract expires.

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* LetsPlay/SkyDoesMinecraft: Parodied. In the [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cYRHSYWtsNc mod showcase video]] for the ''VideoGame/{{Minecraft}}'' Obsidian Realm Mod, Sky shows off the mod-exclusive Obsidian Lamp item in the style of an infomercial, where he (acting as a salesman) obsessively rants about how great the item is before transitioning to screaming about how the lamp is the only thing that matters in life, and how his wife left him because he kept buying lamps. Later received a [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J2JIAUX9Etw fan animation]] that Sky featured on his channel.

to:

* LetsPlay/SkyDoesMinecraft: ''LetsPlay/SkyDoesMinecraft'': Parodied. In the [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cYRHSYWtsNc mod showcase video]] for the ''VideoGame/{{Minecraft}}'' Obsidian Realm Mod, Sky shows off the mod-exclusive Obsidian Lamp item in the style of an infomercial, where he (acting as a salesman) obsessively rants about how great the item is before transitioning to screaming about how the lamp is the only thing that matters in life, and how his wife left him because he kept buying lamps. Later received a [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J2JIAUX9Etw fan animation]] that Sky featured on his channel.channel.
* ''WebAnimation/HomestarRunner'' parodies this. It had previously been established that Homestar Runner's favorite drink is melonade, but in the cartoon "Hremail 7" he reveals that he's actually a paid spokesman for the company, and therefore contractually obligated to act obsessed with the product: "As a national spokesmodel for the Ethical Advancement of Melonade, I am contractually unable to drink, talk about, or bathe in any other liquid!" Homestar ends the Hremail by telling anyone who wants to know what his non-melonade favorite drink is, they need to ask him two years when his contract expires.
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** There's Shadow Man, a man dedicated to making sure people know about Raid: Shadow Legends, going as far as to cause car accidents and plane crashes for it. In one ad, he gifts Raid: Shadow Legends to his children on Christmas (instead of telling them their mother died), and they respond with delight.

to:

** There's Shadow Man, a man dedicated to making sure people know about Raid: Shadow Legends, ''VideoGame/RaidShadowLegends'', going as far as to cause car accidents and plane crashes for it. In one ad, he gifts Raid: ''Raid: Shadow Legends Legends'' to his children on Christmas (instead of telling them their mother died), and they respond with delight.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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* The aptly named 'Magic Bullet' special of ''WebVideo/MemeHouse'' is about a 'family' of spokespersons based on the actual real-life Magic Bullet (a food processor) commercials. In the episode itself, the main couple are cultishly obsessed with said food processor, constantly cooking beyond what's necessary, on top of being extremely mean to the designated ButtMonkey Ralph. [[spoiler: The episode ends with Ralph murdering everyone else in the household, and the reveal that the entire episode was just one long, extremely weird commercial InUniverse.]]

to:

* The aptly named 'Magic Bullet' special of ''WebVideo/MemeHouse'' is about a 'family' of spokespersons based on the actual real-life Magic Bullet (a food processor) commercials. In the episode itself, the main couple are cultishly obsessed with said food processor, constantly cooking beyond what's necessary, on top of being extremely mean to the designated ButtMonkey Ralph. [[spoiler: The [[spoiler:The episode ends with Ralph murdering everyone else in the household, and the reveal that the entire episode was just one long, extremely weird commercial InUniverse.]]



-->'''Ned Dorsey''': Uh, hon, these don't taste like Family Goodness Biscuits.
-->'''Wife''': I tried a different brand tonight. Hope you don't mind.
-->'''Ned Dorsey''': Mind?! Of course I mind, damn it! I want Family Goodness Biscuits! Get out of here, you wrong biscuit-buying slut!

to:

-->'''Ned Dorsey''': Dorsey:''' Uh, hon, these don't taste like Family Goodness Biscuits.
-->'''Wife''': -->'''Wife:''' I tried a different brand tonight. Hope you don't mind.
-->'''Ned Dorsey''': Dorsey:''' Mind?! Of course I mind, damn it! I want Family Goodness Biscuits! Get out of here, you wrong biscuit-buying slut!
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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* Joe Isuzu, the former mascot of the Isuzu car company, obsesses over making the Isuzu car the number one car in America. He drives over to rival car companies just to taunt them about Isuzu's superiority, and stalks other customers in order to direct them towards an Isuzu. He even pretends to be hit by rival cars just so he can tell their drivers the benefits of Isuzu. He does briefly return to a normal life, but after a TrainingMontage where he works out and reminds himself of all the benefits of Isuzu, he's back in business. He dispenses wisdom about Isuzu cars to some visibly confused children.

to:

* Joe Isuzu, the former mascot of the Isuzu car company, obsesses over making the Isuzu car the number one car in America. He drives over to rival car companies just to taunt them about Isuzu's superiority, superiority and stalks other customers in order to direct them towards toward an Isuzu. He even pretends to be hit by rival cars just so he can tell their drivers the benefits of Isuzu. He does briefly return to a normal life, but after a TrainingMontage where he works out and reminds himself of all the benefits of Isuzu, he's back in business. He dispenses wisdom about Isuzu cars to some visibly confused children.



* Advertising/LibertyMutual's "[=LiMu=] Emu (and Doug)" commercials have Doug talk about insurance while doing various unrelated activities, such as beach volleyball. A man in the elevator not hearing Doug's insurance pitch prompts Doug to drop to his knees and unleash a BigNo. While on vacation, Doug's girlfriend gets weirded out at his insurance talk, and insists he just relax for a change.
* A series of ads by Advertising/{{Progressive}} auto insurance put their spokeswoman, Flo, in everyday situations with her family (all played by the same actress). Flo is apparently so obsessed with her work, she plugs it into every mundane conversation. One commercial dares her to go a single minute without mentioning Progressive. She can't do it.

to:

* Advertising/LibertyMutual's "[=LiMu=] Emu (and Doug)" commercials have Doug talk about insurance while doing various unrelated activities, such as beach volleyball. A man in the elevator not hearing Doug's insurance pitch prompts Doug to drop to his knees and unleash a BigNo. While on vacation, Doug's girlfriend gets weirded out at his insurance talk, talk and insists he just relax for a change.
* A series of ads by Advertising/{{Progressive}} auto insurance put their spokeswoman, Flo, spokeswoman Flo in everyday situations with her family (all played by the same actress). Flo is apparently so obsessed with her work, she plugs it into every mundane conversation. One commercial dares her to go a single minute without mentioning Progressive. She can't do it.



* The "Gotta Have My Pops" campaign for Kellogg's Corn Pops depict characters having insane inner monologues just because they're out of Corn Pops. The commercial plots follow a similar trend: They realize they can't eat their cereal, start worrying about someone else eating it, and then, [[FauxHorrific in a series of quick and jarring cuts with horror music playing]], freak out and insist that they just "gotta have [their] Pops!". This is downplayed, however, as they can at least put on a sane facade so others don't know how obsessed they are.
* Swedish coffee brand Gevalia used to have commercials with the Gevalia family. They talked about nothing but coffee, and seemed to like it that way. The plot of the commercials would be like this one: Before the father leaves for work, he is told not to forget to buy coffee. The mom thinks that she'd better buy some while she's out, since the father probably will forget. Everybody else in the family thinks so as well, and once they get home they realize that not only did everybody buy coffee just to be sure -- the dad actually remembered to buy coffee! What a laugh!

to:

* The "Gotta Have My Pops" campaign for Kellogg's Corn Pops depict depicts characters having insane inner monologues just because they're out of Corn Pops. The commercial plots follow a similar trend: They realize they can't eat their cereal, start worrying about someone else eating it, and then, [[FauxHorrific in a series of quick and jarring cuts with horror music playing]], freak out and insist that they just "gotta have [their] Pops!". This is downplayed, however, as they can at least put on a sane facade so others don't know how obsessed they are.
* Swedish coffee brand Gevalia used to have commercials with the Gevalia family. They talked about nothing but coffee, coffee and seemed to like it that way. The plot of the commercials would be like this one: Before the father leaves for work, he is told not to forget to buy coffee. The mom thinks that she'd better buy some while she's out, out since the father probably will forget. Everybody else in the family thinks so as well, and once they get home they realize that not only did everybody buy coffee just to be sure -- the dad actually remembered to buy coffee! What a laugh!



** Some of the ads imply that ''everyone in the world'' is similarly obsessed with Wilkins Coffee, and Wontkins is the only outlier. For example, in one ad Wilkins competes on a game show, and for the grand prize he gets his choice of either a new car, or Wilkins Coffee. Without hesitating, he chooses the coffee. The game show host laments, "We'll never get rid of that car."

to:

** Some of the ads imply that ''everyone in the world'' is similarly obsessed with Wilkins Coffee, and Wontkins is the only outlier. For example, in one ad Wilkins competes on a game show, and for the grand prize prize, he gets his choice of either a new car, car or Wilkins Coffee. Without hesitating, he chooses the coffee. The game show host laments, "We'll never get rid of that car."



* WebVideo/InternetHistorian's sponsorships tend to include over the top scenarios and [[AbusiveAdvertising really obsessive spokespeople]].

to:

* WebVideo/InternetHistorian's sponsorships tend to include over the top over-the-top scenarios and [[AbusiveAdvertising really obsessive spokespeople]].



* ''WesternAnimation/TheCritic'': The episode "Eyes on the Prize" parodies the food commercials that Creator/OrsonWelles did late in his life. Welles has a low opinion of the peas and wine commercials, [[MoneyDearBoy doing them only for the money]], but has an intense attachment to the frozen fishsticks ones. Several times when filming other works, some of which aren't even commercials, he'll switch to plugging fishsticks and eating them on camera. Even as a ghost he's still snacking on them, claiming they taste even better when one is dead.

to:

* ''WesternAnimation/TheCritic'': The episode "Eyes on the Prize" parodies the food commercials that Creator/OrsonWelles did late in his life. Welles has a low opinion of the peas and wine commercials, [[MoneyDearBoy doing them only for the money]], but has an intense attachment to the frozen fishsticks fish sticks ones. Several times when filming other works, some of which aren't even commercials, he'll switch to plugging fishsticks fish sticks and eating them on camera. Even as a ghost ghost, he's still snacking on them, claiming they taste even better when one is dead.



* The aptly named 'Magic Bullet' special of ''WebVideo/MemeHouse'' is about a 'family' of spokespersons based on the actual real life Magic Bullet (a food processor) commercials. In the episode itself, the main couple are cultishly obsessed with said food processor, cooking constantly beyond what's necessary, on top of being extremely mean to the designated ButtMonkey Ralph. [[spoiler: The episode ends with Ralph murdering everyone else in the household, and the reveal that the entire episode was just one long, extremely weird commercial InUniverse.]]

to:

* The aptly named 'Magic Bullet' special of ''WebVideo/MemeHouse'' is about a 'family' of spokespersons based on the actual real life real-life Magic Bullet (a food processor) commercials. In the episode itself, the main couple are cultishly obsessed with said food processor, cooking constantly cooking beyond what's necessary, on top of being extremely mean to the designated ButtMonkey Ralph. [[spoiler: The episode ends with Ralph murdering everyone else in the household, and the reveal that the entire episode was just one long, extremely weird commercial InUniverse.]]



-->'''Ned Dorsey''': Mind?! Of course I mind, damnit! I want Family Goodness Biscuits! Get out of here, you wrong biscuit buying slut!

to:

-->'''Ned Dorsey''': Mind?! Of course I mind, damnit! damn it! I want Family Goodness Biscuits! Get out of here, you wrong biscuit buying biscuit-buying slut!
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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'''TLP Note''': A [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=1616442322022723900&page=1 TRS-spawned]] attempt to rework the trope "Neurosis Commercialis," which is outdated, vaguely defined, and isn't thriving.

Indexes: AdvertisingTropes, MadnessTropes, {{Mascot}}, ComedyTropes

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'''TLP Note''': A [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=1616442322022723900&page=1 TRS-spawned]] attempt to rework the trope "Neurosis Commercialis," which is outdated, vaguely defined, and isn't thriving.

Indexes: AdvertisingTropes, MadnessTropes, {{Mascot}}, ComedyTropes

----

It's expected that characters in AdvertisingCampaigns will spend most of their appearance enjoying the advertised product. We usually don't need to learn about their lives when they're not using the product, so we don't expect their in-universe existence to revolve around the product -- the commercial is just a snapshot of their life that happens to involve the product.

In ''other'' ads, the spokesperson isn't just enjoying the product like a typical customer, or even just doing their job as a {{mascot}}. Their entire life, even off the clock, is dedicated to the product. They're incapable of having a normal conversation without bringing up the product. [[SeriousBusiness They will go to extreme lengths just to get their hands on the product]], and won't accept any alternative. The worst thing they can imagine is not having the product, and it may drive them to go insane. Other characters in the commercial, even those who also enjoy the product, are likely to be weirded out at this character's behavior. Alternatively, they might be just as obsessed with the product, and either beg the character for assistance scoring the product or start a rivalry with them. Either way, the company doesn't expect you to take this character's behavior very seriously, even if they want the product itself to be taken seriously.

This usually appears in {{Long Runn|ers}}ing campaigns that flesh out the everyday lives of their mascot characters, but still have them constantly refer to advertising. The kind of product can also affect how reasonable the obsession appears to be, since a TrademarkFavoriteFood is more likely to come up more in casual conversation often than, say, an insurance comparison site. This often falls into SelfParody territory by mocking the unrealistic nature of a character that exists to shill a product.

Compare FlatCharacter and ThePowerOfCheese, which often overlap with this trope. Also compare AbusiveAdvertising, when not only is the product SeriousBusiness, but the mascot will threaten anybody who doesn't buy it, and StepfordConsumer, when the consumer is ridiculously happy about the product they buy. Contrast WhatWereTheySellingAgain, where the characters barely talk about the product at all, and OurProductSucks, when the characters hate the product.
----

!!Examples:
[[foldercontrol]]
[[folder:Automobiles]]
* Joe Isuzu, the former mascot of the Isuzu car company, obsesses over making the Isuzu car the number one car in America. He drives over to rival car companies just to taunt them about Isuzu's superiority, and stalks other customers in order to direct them towards an Isuzu. He even pretends to be hit by rival cars just so he can tell their drivers the benefits of Isuzu. He does briefly return to a normal life, but after a TrainingMontage where he works out and reminds himself of all the benefits of Isuzu, he's back in business. He dispenses wisdom about Isuzu cars to some visibly confused children.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Financial]]
* The singing tenor of the Go Compare insurance comparison site, Gio Compario, shows up singing whenever somebody mentions insurance. As the campaign progressed, the other characters became more and more uncomfortable with Gio's obsessive approach, to the point where several ads had people try to kill him.
* Advertising/LibertyMutual's "[=LiMu=] Emu (and Doug)" commercials have Doug talk about insurance while doing various unrelated activities, such as beach volleyball. A man in the elevator not hearing Doug's insurance pitch prompts Doug to drop to his knees and unleash a BigNo. While on vacation, Doug's girlfriend gets weirded out at his insurance talk, and insists he just relax for a change.
* A series of ads by Advertising/{{Progressive}} auto insurance put their spokeswoman, Flo, in everyday situations with her family (all played by the same actress). Flo is apparently so obsessed with her work, she plugs it into every mundane conversation. One commercial dares her to go a single minute without mentioning Progressive. She can't do it.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Food and Drink]]
* Advertising/CharlieTheTuna spends most of his time doing activities that appeal to [=StarKist=] Tuna so they'll appreciate his "good taste" and catch him. The problem is, he doesn't necessarily ''taste good,'' so they always reject him.
* Sonny, the cuckoo bird mascot of the Cocoa Puffs cereal, is so obsessed with Cocoa Puffs that he literally bounces all over the walls going "cuckoo" for them. Many ads have him try to avoid Cocoa Puffs, but reminders of Cocoa Puffs are ''[[ColdTurkeysAreEverywhere everywhere]]''.
* A series of commercials for the coffee creamer [=CoffeeMate=] stars a man who dresses like the [=CoffeeMate=] container and fills his home with pictures of [=CoffeeMate=] creamer. In one ad, he wonders if he loves [=CoffeeMate=] too much...then decides such a thing is impossible.
* The "Gotta Have My Pops" campaign for Kellogg's Corn Pops depict characters having insane inner monologues just because they're out of Corn Pops. The commercial plots follow a similar trend: They realize they can't eat their cereal, start worrying about someone else eating it, and then, [[FauxHorrific in a series of quick and jarring cuts with horror music playing]], freak out and insist that they just "gotta have [their] Pops!". This is downplayed, however, as they can at least put on a sane facade so others don't know how obsessed they are.
* Swedish coffee brand Gevalia used to have commercials with the Gevalia family. They talked about nothing but coffee, and seemed to like it that way. The plot of the commercials would be like this one: Before the father leaves for work, he is told not to forget to buy coffee. The mom thinks that she'd better buy some while she's out, since the father probably will forget. Everybody else in the family thinks so as well, and once they get home they realize that not only did everybody buy coffee just to be sure -- the dad actually remembered to buy coffee! What a laugh!
* The "Crazy Cravings" campaign for Honeycomb Cereal featured bug-eyed furry monsters who destroy anything in their path trying to devour the cereal, screaming "Me want Honeycomb!" In several commercials, people transformed into these creatures and went berserk once they started craving Honeycomb.
* A 2013 commercial for [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vAnD2nGLuA8 Subway's avocado sandwiches]] depicted two women competing over who loves avocados more. This involves wearing avocado merchandise, tending to avocado trees, and driving an avo''car''do. It ends when one of the women introduces her firstborn son named Avocado, rendering her friend speechless.
* Parodied and played for laughs by an advertisement for Trident Layers gum, in which a slightly-eerie StepfordSmiler family is ''thrilled'' that their patriarch is now getting paid in gum. A chimney sweep even pops out of the fireplace to share their joy, and the camera pans to show a disappointed-looking electrician complaining that ''he'' never gets paid in gum. The commercial hook itself is parodied in a later ad which depicts a man as being ecstatic that his new job pays him in Trident Layers, but his family doesn't share his deranged psychosis and is worried about how they're going to pay the bills.
* The Advertising/TrixRabbit has resorted to many life-risking {{Zany Scheme}}s just to eat a bite of Trix Cereal. Ironically, he often ruins the chance to eat some because he goes crazy thinking about how good the cereal tastes and blows his cover.
* ''Advertising/WilkinsCoffee:''
** The main character of the ads is Wilkins, a vaguely lizard-ish puppet who regularly visits DisproportionateRetribution on [[WithFriendsLikeThese his friend]] Wontkins for the crime of disliking said coffee. This includes shooting Wontkins, stabbing him with a rapier, blasting him point-blank with a cannon, flattening him with a steamroller, and blowing up his house--and [[AbusiveAdvertising then Wilkins implies the same fate will befall the viewer as well]], if they don't drink Wilkins Coffee. When he isn't inflicting over-the-top violence in the name of coffee, Wilkins will gleefully soak his head in Wilkins Coffee (literally), and may even be willing to pay a million dollars for a single cup.
** Some of the ads imply that ''everyone in the world'' is similarly obsessed with Wilkins Coffee, and Wontkins is the only outlier. For example, in one ad Wilkins competes on a game show, and for the grand prize he gets his choice of either a new car, or Wilkins Coffee. Without hesitating, he chooses the coffee. The game show host laments, "We'll never get rid of that car."
* An ad for Frosted Mini-Wheats Cinnamon Roll cereal featured a family whose house and outfits were exclusively themed around cinnamon rolls (with the son painting a giant cinnamon roll on an easel) holding an excited family meeting about the new cereal.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Household Products]]
* A Charmin ad campaign stars a family of bears who literally sing the praises of their favorite toilet paper. They have family gatherings that consist of nothing more than rubbing the toilet paper on themselves. Changing the toilet paper too much horrifies them, and the parents read their son a scary bedtime story about [[FauxHorrific running out of toilet paper]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Politics]]
* A variant in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wzjRwNUQDRU this]] ad for Gerald Daugherty's re-election campaign. To sell himself as a concerned politician, Gerald is depicted as unable to talk about anything except his policy ideas, even when he's just hanging out with his family. His wife wants him re-elected just so he can get out of the house.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Public Service Announcements]]
* In first half of ''Film/ACaseOfSpringFever'', the protagonist Gilbert gains a new appreciation for springs after [[ItsAWonderfulPlot seeing how dull the world would be without them]]. In the second half, Gilbert becomes an ''evangelist'' for springs: when he goes golfing with his friends, he spends the entire trip monologuing about springs and their many, many uses. His friends get annoyed at him, or bored to the point of falling asleep, and he just keeps talking about springs.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Stores]]
* A 2010 campaign for Target starred Creator/MariaBamford as an eccentric wide-eyed lady who spends all her time preparing to "win" Target's Christmas sale. She stays up all night making a Target store out of gingerbread and pulls two carts of Target items up a hill as a workout. She even has a TrainingMontage where she carries heavy items in baskets and does sit-ups on the big red ball outside a Target store.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Television]]
* ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'' has [[FriendlyPirate Patchy the Pirate]], the [=SpongeBob=] Fan Club president who hosts several special episodes of ''[=SpongeBob=]'', as well as ''[=SpongeBob=]'' promotional material. His house is filled with ''[=SpongeBob=]'' merchandise and he goes to extreme lengths to see new ''[=SpongeBob=]'' episodes, including a lost episode, and even tries to meet [=SpongeBob=] in person. Even his pirate getup seems to just be an extension of his [=SpongeBob=] obsession, since he lives in modern-day Encino, California.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Other/Multiple Products]]
* WebVideo/InternetHistorian's sponsorships tend to include over the top scenarios and [[AbusiveAdvertising really obsessive spokespeople]].
** There's Shadow Man, a man dedicated to making sure people know about Raid: Shadow Legends, going as far as to cause car accidents and plane crashes for it. In one ad, he gifts Raid: Shadow Legends to his children on Christmas (instead of telling them their mother died), and they respond with delight.
** There's [=NordVPN=] Man, who once tried to [[DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything coerce a woman into letting him use [=NordVPN=]]], and also once stalked and harassed a different woman to "prove" how easy it is for hackers to collect data.
** There's Raycon Man, who is on a personal quest to replace all wires with Raycon earbuds. On his journey, he cuts the [[WireDilemma wrong wire to a bomb causing untold amounts of injury]], cuts an astronaut's oxygen line, leaving him to die in space, and cuts power to major cities along the American east coast. He also proposes to a woman with Raycon earbuds.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:In-Universe Examples]]
* In the Website/CollegeHumor video "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=427rUyZ64Zo Extremely Real People Who Are Definitely Not Actors]]," a group of "[[BlatantLies real people, not actors]]" in a battery commercial go absolutely berserk over the obscure-award-winning power of Omnivolt batteries. One girl breaks a table and another guy's [[YourHeadASplode head explodes]] after learning that Omnivolt was the second most reliable battery in a consumer survey.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheCritic'': The episode "Eyes on the Prize" parodies the food commercials that Creator/OrsonWelles did late in his life. Welles has a low opinion of the peas and wine commercials, [[MoneyDearBoy doing them only for the money]], but has an intense attachment to the frozen fishsticks ones. Several times when filming other works, some of which aren't even commercials, he'll switch to plugging fishsticks and eating them on camera. Even as a ghost he's still snacking on them, claiming they taste even better when one is dead.
* ''WesternAnimation/DrawnTogether'' parodied Sonny the Cuckoo Bird's Cocoa Puffs obsession by depicting him at the hospital in a straitjacket, screaming, "Somebody get me some fucking puffs!"
* The aptly named 'Magic Bullet' special of ''WebVideo/MemeHouse'' is about a 'family' of spokespersons based on the actual real life Magic Bullet (a food processor) commercials. In the episode itself, the main couple are cultishly obsessed with said food processor, cooking constantly beyond what's necessary, on top of being extremely mean to the designated ButtMonkey Ralph. [[spoiler: The episode ends with Ralph murdering everyone else in the household, and the reveal that the entire episode was just one long, extremely weird commercial InUniverse.]]
* ''WebVideo/GameGrumps'': A bit in the ''Grumps Dream Course'' playthrough had Arin mimic Creator/LarryTheCableGuy's Prilosec heartburn medicine commercials, except the impression derails into Larry worshiping Prilosec as a god and eating it in the place of normal food.
* PlayedForLaughs on ''Series/NedAndStacey'' where Ned refuses to accept anything but a certain biscuit brand:
-->'''Ned Dorsey''': Uh, hon, these don't taste like Family Goodness Biscuits.
-->'''Wife''': I tried a different brand tonight. Hope you don't mind.
-->'''Ned Dorsey''': Mind?! Of course I mind, damnit! I want Family Goodness Biscuits! Get out of here, you wrong biscuit buying slut!
* Parodied in an article of ''Magazine/TheOnion'' introducing a violent UsefulNotes/McDonalds mascot, "The Hammurderer." The article mentions another (fictional) recalled character, "Shakes [=McJunkie=]," who was so [[GRatedDrug addicted to McDonald's shakes]] that he committed robberies just to get money for shakes. This mascot was apparently retooled into "The Machead" who used "panhandling and gay prostitution" to fund his burger addiction.
* LetsPlay/SkyDoesMinecraft: Parodied. In the [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cYRHSYWtsNc mod showcase video]] for the ''VideoGame/{{Minecraft}}'' Obsidian Realm Mod, Sky shows off the mod-exclusive Obsidian Lamp item in the style of an infomercial, where he (acting as a salesman) obsessively rants about how great the item is before transitioning to screaming about how the lamp is the only thing that matters in life, and how his wife left him because he kept buying lamps. Later received a [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J2JIAUX9Etw fan animation]] that Sky featured on his channel.
[[/folder]]
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