The Doritos Ad Was Not Funny

· Tuesday, February 16, 2010

By far, the most popular ad shown during the latest Super Bowl (trademarked name "Super Bowl" not used with the expressed written consent of the National Football League) was the Doritos "House Rules" ad. Tens of millions of Americans saw it as hilarious.

That is unfortunate. Anyone aware of the manifold social pathologies the ad depicted did not find much to laugh about.

Here is the ad:

A man knocks on a door. A pretty woman answers it. He hands her flowers and she thanks him. He has presumably come to take her out on a date. She introduces her young son to the man and excuses herself. She walks back to her room. The camera focuses on her shapely legs, quite visible given that she is wearing a miniskirt. The man stares, indeed leers, at her legs and makes a facial gesture suggesting, shall we say, sexual interest. The boy, who appears to be about 5 years old, sees this and drops his toy. The man sits on the couch and helps himself to a Dorito. The boy walks up to the man, smacks him hard across the face and says, "Keep your hands off my mama. Keep your hands off my Doritos."

Here are the major elements of dysfunction this ad depicts:

First, a child smacking an adult across the face is not funny. It is, in fact, one of the last things society should tolerate. I will deal with the widespread defense of the child's action -- "he was only protecting his mother" -- later.

In real life, a child who hits an adult needs to be disciplined. If a child did that to me, I would grab his offending arm and apply enough force to make it clear that he will never do that again.

After I mentioned this on my radio show, some psychotherapists sent me e-mails disagreeing with these views. They noted, for example, that "violence breeds violence."

Some cliches are true; I find this one meaningless. The truth is the opposite: Immoral violence breeds violence; moral violence (such as just wars, police work and appropriate parental discipline) reduces violence.

I am well aware that vast numbers of Americans (and Europeans) believe that engaging in any physical discipline of a child is wrong. I, too, held this belief for most of my life, and I never hit or spanked either of my sons. I have changed my mind because of all the fine people who have called my show or written to me about how they were spanked and now believe that they are better adults because of it. It is a given that I do not defend physical -- or any other form of -- abuse against a child. Of all the world's evils, child abuse may rank as the greatest. But a properly administered spanking is not abuse.

The New York Times recently published an article titled "For Some Parents, Shouting Is the New Spanking," in which it noted that many parents now regularly scream at their children in part because they cannot spank them. I am not at all certain that being screamed at by a parent is an improvement over spanking.

The Doritos kid deserved a physical response from this man -- as in pressure on the offending arm. With regard to the argument that this man was not the boy's parent -- and the terrible fact that there is far too much hitting and abuse of children by stepfathers and boyfriends -- I do not believe that only parents may physically respond to a child. Teachers, for example, should be permitted to do so -- I was physically dealt with by a number of teachers, and in every case, I deserved it. I also did so as a camp counselor -- to great effect. And so should the man whom the child in the ad smacked. In an ideal world, all adults raise all children in some way.

Second, the two adults in this ad act, to say the least, very irresponsibly.

The man acts and speaks like a lecher and moron. And the woman should not have exuded sexuality for a date in front of her little boy.

Those who argue that the boy was just defending his mom may well be right. But that only further reinforces the point of what a dysfunctional scene the ad was portraying: a leering man, a sexually provocatively dressed mother and sexually aware child who essentially serves as man of the house at the age of 5.

Finally, people only find funny that which has some truth in it. Would this ad have worked as well if the characters depicted were all, let us say, Asian-American? Would it have been as effective if it portrayed whites acting this way?

Tragically, it worked in part because the characters were African-American. The unimpressive sex-on-the-mind male, the sexually provocative single mother and the prematurely sexually aware and violent boy who is man of the house were familiar -- either as an inaccurate white stereotype of much of urban black life, or as an accurate stereotype of much of urban black life. In either case, the ad is not funny at all.

COPYRIGHT 2010 CREATORS.COM


Third-party content does not necessarily reflect the opinions of The Patriot Post.


Comments

Jimmy D

Hmmmm...

I laughed and thought that was the best one.

Everything you say is true...except that it wasn't funny.

Humor, like genuine love (as noted so well in this article) is not always about making nice. Sometimes the truth is an inappropriate slap in the face that one cannot help but admire.

The ad works because what you describe is the wretched reality that this culture has to laugh at to maintain its sanity.

It's like the truth behind the cliche, that comedians are the saddest people.

Posted February 16, 2010 at 9:19:38 AM


David S.

Mr. Prager,

I honestly had not thought of this ad as anything but funny, but I concede that you have several good points. With discipline almost non-existent today, we need to be careful to portray the proper respect for elders (even when they don't act like they deserve respect).

Posted February 16, 2010 at 9:32:51 AM


Paul S.

I too found no humor in this ad (nor many of the ads) as they depicted the worst truths of our society. Other ads portray women as the rulers of the home, the smart, the wise and the savvy; men on the other hand are portrayed as stupid, incompetent, inept, and as foolish or immature as their own children. If the MEN of America don't find these advertisements offensive then I guess the shoe fits.

Posted February 16, 2010 at 10:00:55 AM


MichaelSSEC

Another excellent column from the inestimable Mr Prager! To my mind, even more disturbing than the dysfunctions celebrated in this ad was the normalizing of adults being "raised" by children. We see this increasingly in our culture, particularly pop culture.

Hollywood produces strings of movies in which the only intelligent, rational people in the film are all less than 15 years old while the adults are fumbling morons who cannot reason. Same thing with television. It's in so many commercials now that it's become ubiquitous.

It's not just that adults are stupid. They're spineless. Just one example would be the cell phone ad a couple of years ago in which kids depicted as scary monsters terrified parents with the prospect of enormous phone bills, while the parents cringed but didn't think of telling them NO. That's a common theme in advertising today.

For kids to assault adults is now accepted because it's part of the mindset that holds children as just smaller versions of grownups rather than fundamentally undeveloped, formative CHILDREN in need of strict guidance. This goes hand in hand with the reduction of moral authority to the level of the child, as kids are now endowed with the ability to argue with their parents -- and invariably get their way. There's no more parental authority as the final word. Now every single thing in a child's life is subject to negotiation.

Once children are raised with the expectation that if they argue and cajole aggressively enough they can bully their way into getting what they want, it paves the way for generations of young adults who expect life to work that way -- and they turn to government as in loco parentis. Thus, if they scream loud enough, they can force government to give them more and more entitlements. Therein lies the sinister purpose behind this dysfunctional dystopia in which we're raising far too many children today.

Posted February 16, 2010 at 1:12:22 PM


Paul S.

I too found no humor in this ad (nor many of the ads) as they depicted the worst truths of our society. Other ads portray women as the rulers of the home, the smart, the wise and the savvy; men on the other hand are portrayed as stupid, incompetent, inept, and as foolish or immature as their own children. If the MEN of America don't find these advertisements offensive then I guess the shoe fits.

Posted February 16, 2010 at 3:00:12 PM


Dave

AMEN.

Posted August 30, 2010 at 4:05:04 PM


Post a Comment

Please keep comments civil and brief. Obscene, profane, abusive and off-topic comments will be deleted. Repeat offenders will be blocked.

(required, displayed)
(required, not displayed)
Facebook Twitter YouTube RSS Connect with The Patriot Post






Our Mission

To Support and Defend -- Read The Patriot Post -- It's Right. It's Free. -- www.patriotpost.us

"The Patriot's mission is to advocate for Essential Liberty, the restoration of constitutional limits on government and the judiciary, and to promote free enterprise, national defense and traditional American values. Our objective is to provide Patriots across our nation with a touchstone of First Principles through brief, informative and entertaining analyses of relevant news, policy and opinion from reputable research, advocacy and media organizations, so they may better support and defend those Principles, and enlist others to join our ranks." —Mark Alexander, Publisher


The Patriot Post is not sustained by any political, special interest or parent organization, and we accept no advertising. Our mission and operations are funded entirely by the voluntary financial support of Patriots like you!

Support The 2012 Patriot Fund