If you are talking about the commercial from the 70's it was Gravy train.
That would be the commercial for Gravy Train dog food.the dog food that makes its own gravy when water is added.
That was the commercial for Gravy Train dog food.
Gravy train
snowdrift
jkcf
You can think about what they are trying to sell. What demographic are they reaching. Can the product really do what they claim?
I saw the song featured in the made for TV movie, 'Baby M', but it could of been featured in others as well. 'Baby M' was a movie based on a true story, about a baby that was a product of surrogation that went wrong. The woman who was eager to volunteer herself as a surrogate mother, changed her mind after the baby's birth. She ended up kidnapping the baby girl and changed the baby's name to "Sara", which is where the song came into the movie.
The companies that advertise products believe so, as do many of the advertising companies. Many people are persuaded to by certain products because of advertising, others are not.
Gravy train
Gaines burgers
gravy train
Wilkins coffee was advertised in 1957. It featured an eight second commercial where one Muppet fires a cannon to discourage another Muppet from drinking it.
snowdrift
gravy train
gravy train
The stuff is called Back to Black, it is made by "Mothers".
Wheaties
Surrogate advertising is when an advertisement has the logo or brand of another company advertised within it. An example would be a product that shows in the commercial retailer outlets that offer their product in stores.
"When I eat a York Peppermint Patty I get the sensation..." A commercial which doesn't tell much about the product, only how it will feel to eat it.
no not all of the time it depends on the product and how it is advertised