Commercial Break

While sitting on the couch surfing the internet on a laptop and languishing in my post-holiday session of binge-eating, and simultaneously enjoying a rerun of South Park, I began to notice an abnormal amount of commercials for “Bowflex.” I’d hate to think advertisers are taking advantage of the fact that most people eat during the holidays as if they had entered some kind of contest, but the amount of times I’ve seen the commercial run really makes me wonder.

What I like most about the commercial is the fact that in the time it would take to order the “Bowflex,” wait for several days before you find out shipping has been delayed, receive the stupid thing after yelling at the stooges at customer service for days and days, let it sit in the big-ass box for a week or two, finally work up the courage to open the box and begin putting it together, recover from the injury sustained while assembling it, read the directions and learn how to operate those lethal looking cables, you could have gotten up off your ass, sat down and worked out a sensible meal plan, jogged around the block several days in a row, and actually lost several pounds.

I also love the fact that the PR folks at “Bowflex” couldn’t find any actual customers who lost weight with their machine to give a testimonial, so they hired the genetic freaks that appear on the commercial to parade around and flex in all their mesomorphic-glory. You’d have to be mentally damaged to think that working out three times a week on a cable machine might actually transform your body into the same shape as the two Greek statues working out on the commercial.

Here’s an idea: eat sensibly and every once in a while participate in an activity which forces you to move around a little bit. If you’re really motivated avoid the complications of putting together a machine which will inevitably end up as a place to hang clothing and join a gym. Either that, or simply revel in your fatness”¦eat what you want and don’t let “Bowflex,” “Trimspa,” “Leptoprin,” “Stacker,” or any other cure-all make you feel guilty.

”¦now back to South Park.

Categories: Texaspecific | 2 Comments

Post navigation

2 thoughts on “Commercial Break

  1. Chris

    Just a thought: I believe the people at the wondrous Bowflex place know they are not selling fitness, not really, they are selling dreams. Everyone (every REAL one) knows in the back of their mind they will just hang clothes on the dang thing, but the fantasy , oh the fantasy…. “I could look like that”. And you can have that fantasy every time you approach the mighty machine to pick out part of your daily outfit. Just knowing, “I could, I COULD, be that, if only I wanted”, is worth it. Besides, HUSH!! I **LIKE** looking at those greek statues!!!!! Even knowing they look like they don’t really date women. Especially not six foot women like me….

  2. Of course you’re right. Dreams are extremely marketable. How else do you explain beer ads? If the guys in the ads actually looked like the typical beer drinker no one would buy the beer.

    Oh don’t get me wrong, those models are not hard to look at, but I wouldn’t want to actually be with someone who looked like them. Someone who spends that much time sculpting their body couldn’t possibly be any fun in everyday life. I wouldn’t wanna be with someone who wouldn’t share a big ‘ole plate of nachos with me because they’re worried about their figure. Too much baggage.

Leave a Reply to Mark A. Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Proudly powered by WordPress Theme: Adventure Journal by Contexture International.