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Budweiser's 'Puppy Love' Ad Wins Super Bowl Viewers' Hearts

Puppy + Clydesdale = awww.
Anheuser-Busch.com
Puppy + Clydesdale = awww.

The Super Bowl sure didn't live up to expectations. Pigskin prognosticators told us it would be a close game between the NFL's two best teams.

Instead, Seattle won a 43-8 laugher. Denver was never really in it.

The other big story of every Super Bowl, though, turned out just as experts predicted it would.

"Puppy Love," Budweiser's latest sentimental spot to use a cute dog and photogenic Clydesdales to sell beer, won USA Today's annual Super Bowl Ad Meter.

"Never mind that it aired with just two minutes left in a dog of a game," USA Today writes, the ad "about a spunky puppy who is adopted but keeps coming back home to the Clydesdale horse it loves" scored highest with the newspaper's online audience of 6,272 voters.

The commercial, which Budweiser had put online last week, had been a pregame favorite to win viewers' hearts. After all, a similar spot won last year's Ad Meter.

Other ads that scored well with USA Today's panelists:

-- Doritos' "Cowboy Kid"

-- Budweiser's "Hero's Welcome"

-- Doritos' "Time Machine"

-- Radio Shack's "Phone Call"

As for the trend this year, The New York Times says that unlike in other recent years when many of the ads were edgy, "most of the commercials that Fox broadcast nationally during Super Bowl XLVIII on Sunday sought to invoke fuzzy feelings that would warm the cockles of consumer hearts, if not MetLife Stadium. The television and social media audiences were exhorted repeatedly to forget their troubles and put on a smiley face."

If you're looking for recaps of the game:

-- "Seahawks Dominate Broncos For Super Bowl Victory" (Morning Edition)

-- "Defense And Special Teams Win It For Seattle In Convincing Fashion" (The Seattle Times)

-- "SEASICK" (The homepage of The Denver Post)

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

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Mark Memmott is NPR's supervising senior editor for Standards & Practices. In that role, he's a resource for NPR's journalists – helping them raise the right questions as they do their work and uphold the organization's standards.
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