Microsoft resorts to vomit to market IE 8
Editor's note at 10:25 p.m. PDT: Since this blog was published, the video has been removed from the hosting pages. But this copy of the video remains on YouTube.
I know a girl who gets somewhat uptight when she's in the passenger seat of a car going any more than 70 mph. However, put her on some insane roller coaster, and she's just fine.
The driving dangers are real, you see. Whereas the roller-coaster ride just feels wonderfully stomach-turning.
And so it is with this charming new online ad for Internet Explorer 8 from Microsoft. In most of its advertising, Microsoft has rarely reached 70 mph. But someone, somewhere deep within Microsoft, finally had the craving for the roller coaster.
Here we have a couple at the breakfast table. The husband is examining his laptop. It is not a Mac.
His wife asks to borrow his laptop for a minute. To be fair, shortly before she does this, she shows all the symptoms of being a little stressed. Her lips are tight. Her eyebrows seem even tighter.
She looks at her husband's screen. She is surprised at what she sees and says: "What's this?" Then her body begins involuntary motions. Will an alien being pop from her stomach, leap onto the table, and begin to sing a Celine Dion number?
Will she turn toward her husband, enraged at what she has just seen and assail him with words and fists and spittle and quotes from Joan Crawford?
Not quite.
In fact, she turns away from the kitchen table, not wishing to soil his PC. And then she vomits.
Yes, she vomits. She pukes. She throws up. She upchucks. She phones Huey and Ralph down the big white telephone. (This last phrase is peculiarly English. You need to say the words "Huey" and "Ralph" with an echoing timbre.)
Her vomit is yellow, powerful, and a decent, if distant, relative of the turbo-charged green liquid emitted by Linda Blair in "The Exorcist." Although, truly, one wonders what there really could have been on that screen to make her do so. Most wives have surely seen it all.
Still, her husband, the sinful, disgusting, smug pervert, slips on the vomit as it hits the kitchen floor.
What could possibly happen after all this drama? Does Superman turn up? Actually, he does. In the shape of actor Dean Cain. Dean, who appears unaffected by the detritus at his feet, asks, "Do you suffer from OMGIGP?"
This acronym, for those of you still in control of your diaphragm, stands for "Oh my god, I'm gonna puke."
Superman then goes on to explain that IE 8 has InPrivate Browsing while the husband, still prostrate on the kitchen floor, is privately adorned with even more of his wife's mellow yellow.
As the wife wipes her chin, all I can think about is that Superman's turtleneck is yellow too--and that, even a year ago, no one would have ever expected Microsoft to make a spot like this.
This work is not, as some have surmised, the work of Crispin Porter + Bogusky, the agency responsible for both the "I'm a PC" and Gates-Seinfeld campaigns. It is the brainchild of Bradley and Montgomery, the folks that brought you the Mojave Experiment.
The vomit ad is one of a series, all featuring Cain. The series is taglined "Browse Better," and like the Mojave project, it has its own site, BrowsefortheBetter.com.
Interestingly, and perhaps, for some, ironically, the BrowsefortheBetter site says that for every download of IE 8, the company will donate 8 meals to Feeding America, an organization trying to stop hunger in the U.S.
Of course, some will say of this vomiting ad: "Out, damned spot." Harry McCracken of Technologizer has already dubbed it as "Worst. Tech. Commercial. Ever?"
I will say this. Microsoft has realized that it needs attention. It is finding many and varied ways of doing so. In this case, I suspect that someone has said in a long, long marketing meeting: "Hmm, maybe snot-nosed, filthy T-shirted, gross-out humored, socially inept children really do have an influence."
Chris Matyszczyk is an award-winning creative director who advises major corporations on content creation and marketing. He brings an irreverent, sarcastic, and sometimes ironic voice to the tech world. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. 




Incognito Mode was in Chrome from release. (the very very first one)
Actually, Microsoft was the last one to have the "one of those 'holy crap, that is a good idea" moments'. Mozilla and Google had the idea implemented well before Microsoft had the idea.
Fx was the last to implement it.
HTH.
Get a life, guys.
MS Mantra:
If you cannot innovate...imitate.
If you cannot imitate, then steal it & bankrupt the innovator in court fees.
If you cannot steal it, then buy them out, change the name & spend billions advertising your NEW Innovative product from Microsoft!
If all else fails, hire a PR company, to do stupid advertisements, ( created on Apple Mac computers ) then run them on TV every 5 minutes ( " BING! )
Extend, Embrace, Extinguish is their credo.
We're not a monopoly...we're your friends...NOT!
You mean a lot of locked in customers.
Who's holding a gun to their head? As long as there's Apple, and all these freebies, what is preventing mass emigration? OEMs? They might market machines with OS X if they could, but Apple won't allow it. Don't blame that on Microsoft. Locked in customers, seriously. Take another hit, dude!
The Bing ads are great and show a lot of creativity.
I liked the brown Zunes, except for that horrid green colored bezel. They should have used a brass, bronze, copper, or even a silver bezel.
http://www.adpulp.com/archives/2008/05/16/alex_fast_co.jpg
Answer: no.
(and they were smart enough to stay honest in teh whole ad. :) ).
The only nitpick I would have is that the viewer didn't understand what made her throw up, clear until the end of the ad... maybe if they had her verbalize that she stumbled on his browsing history before she began getting sick?
I want to see the reverse. "Honey can I use your Mac for second?" She throws up. Dean Cain comes on. "Do you suffer from OMGIAPT? Or 'Oh my god I'm a pretentious ****."
I'm glad you got your Redmond talking points email today.
Really?
I thought she was probably looking at a recipe site or something similar.
Could anyone make out what site Superman was referring to?
BUT...doesn't it send the message that with Internet Explorer 8, you can get away with watching porn, without anyone finding out? =P
IE apologists make us want to puke.
I'll associate Hillary Clinton with Vomit from now on, since I saw those two words in a relatively close diameter.
However, is the message that MS wants the perverts to use IE8 to hide their tracks?
Porn always gets people attracted to things.
- by Ilgaz July 1, 2009 9:43 AM PDT
- Apple would never reference porn to begin with. Also vomiting? MSFT shareholders should be asking if they paid for this.
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- by thelemurking July 1, 2009 10:35 AM PDT
- Yes because Apple has a nice hypocrisy going for them with objectionable content... you can download the most vulgar nasty rap on iTunes, you can get some r rated movies with nudity, but the moment an app shows some boobies or can access an ebook that talks about sex, then Apple quickly becomes the moral police.
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