10 Super Bowl spots from advertisers that don’t exist anymore

The Pets.com sock puppet dog stars in a commercial for the company, Jan. 11, 2000, in Los Angeles.

Bob Riha | Liaison | Getty Images

When a brand shells out big bucks to advertise on the most-watched event of the year, it usually hopes it’s investing for the long haul.

But some companies that have advertised during past Super Bowls don’t exist anymore. For instance, some companies advertised during the “Dot-Com Super Bowl” in 2000 and pulled the plug just months later. Quibi is a more recent example: It premiered an ad during the 2020 Super Bowl ahead of its release last year and then announced plans in October to shut down.

Here’s a look back at 10 Super Bowl ads from companies that no longer exist.

Quibi 

Pets.com 

In 2000, Pets.com paid an estimated $1.2 million for a Super Bowl ad showcasing its sock puppet mascot. The beloved spot from TBWA/Chiat/Day, titled “Please Don’t Go,” featured the mascot singing Chicago’s “If You Leave Me Now.” Soon after, it launched a disappointing IPO, then by November it told customers it was no longer accepting orders.

Epidemic.com

Ameriquest Mortgage 

Subprime mortgage lender Ameriquest ran a handful of Super Bowl ads until it closed in 2007. Employees later said the company pushed customers into loans they couldn’t afford. Ads shown in 2005 and 2006 had the tagline “Don’t judge too quickly. We won’t,” and showed different scenarios where people had unwittingly gotten themselves in uncompromising-looking positions. 

FLO TV

Qualcomm shut down its mobile video service FLO TV in 2010. At the time, the demise was blamed on wireless carriers that didn’t promote the service heavily enough, and a $15 monthly service fee that analysts said was too steep. Qualcomm ran two FLO TV ads in 2010 before it shut the service down, according to Ad Age’s Super Bowl Ad Archive. “Spineless,” shown below, was cited in a 2011 piece from The Atlantic that called that year’s Super Bowl “a bonfire of gender-charged, and borderline sexist, advertisements.” This particular one, the writer said, was “the most explicit boomerang against women gaining the upper hand in relationships.”

E-Stamp 

Computer.com

Computer.com reportedly spent half its in venture capital on Super Bowl ads before and during the 2000 game. Then it sold to Office Depot that year. As Ad Age put it, it’s an “intentionally amateurish video of the founders begging for support so they can pacify relatives and other panicky investors.”

Lifeminders.com

Netpliance

“What if every last one of us could access the internet and email without using a computer? Well, then every last one of us could be a webhead,” the voiceover of Netpliance’s 2000 spot, “Webheads” promised. Netpliance went to the Super Bowl to get attention for its “I-Opener,” a computer that was intended for browsing the web and offered a subscription plan. The Federal Trade Commission would ultimately settle with the company over its sales and billing practices, (it warned of future fines but better to call it a settlement), and in 2002 the company renamed itself and moved out of the internet appliance business.

OurBeginning.com

Another dot-com Super Bowl ad, titled “Angry Brides,” comes from OurBeginning.com. The theme, a bunch of brides fighting over invitations, earned the ad a “Sexism Alert” from a blog post written by a Turkish university. “While watching this ad please remember that in 2000 gender awareness was as bad as the video quality,” it said. The company, which sold wedding invitations, announcements and stationery, filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection by the end of 2001.


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