Christopher Guest’s Census Commercials

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I love Christopher Guest, both as an actor as a director, so I was intrigued when I heard he’d be shooting a series of viral commercials to help promote the U.S. Census (Huh?). One of the ads aired last night during the Super Bowl, costing taxpayers $2.5 million (a fact which has caused some consternation). Hit the jump to see all the commercials.

The commercials follow the travails of director/auteur Payton Schlewitt, who is attempting to film a “Snapshot of America” featuring 300 million people. Shot in Guest’s typical style, with some talking heads interviews interspliced with behind-the-scenes footage, the ads feature a healthy dose of quirk, surrealism, and pathos.

CNN has a piece about the ads, in which certain pundits posit that they won’t be able to connect with everyday viewers. According to David Griner from Adfreak:

It’s a strange time to do a viral campaign, especially one that’s obviously got quite a bit of star power behind it, when the upper middle-class, white audience is going to be the usual core group that mostly finds the Christopher Guest mockumentary style really hilarious and really compelling…You have to wonder if that’s a group that didn’t understand the role of the census and would not have been active to take part in it.

However, Gary Resch, who helped develop the ads, responded to this argument, saying, “I think it’s a little bit presumptuous to think that only educated or sophisticated people get this type of comedy….This concept was developed before Christopher Guest came on board.” So, what say you readers? Will these ads reach Middle America? Will they cross racial and ethnic lines? And will they make people want to fill out their Census forms? You decide!

For my part, I can say that these spots sneak up on you, as do most of Guest’s films. What starts as an off-kilter talking-head interview can quickly generate some pretty big laughs. I’m a fan and I find them as good a combination of “Christopher Guest” and “U.S. Census Commercial” as we are likely to get.

Let us know what you think in the comments.

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  • I don't find these useful, funny or entertaining in the least. I think the Hollywood folks and the liberals in DC are just doing their best to amuse each other now, with our money. It seems like what other folks think isn't even considered. No way should tax dollars be used for this nonsense. These people are on another planet and I have no desire to go there.
  • I stop paying attention when the term liberals is used inappropriately...
  • Jimmy
    True. They should be called neo-marxists.
  • That is either a) a joke I failed to understand or b) a gross misunderstanding of the concept of Liberalism and Marxism.
  • Gigi
    I'm annoyed and bored by the whole thing. I find the idea of using Hollywood types to do a campaign bordering on propaganda and that's offensive to me. A census is a necessary evil. We'll participate because we have to. An ad campaign is a sneaky way for the administration to lecture us yet again to do what we already know we're supposed to do. And frankly, I'm tired of constantly being nagged to death. Can't he just leave us alone for awhile?! Enough already! We're grown adults. Leave us be! This nitpicking takes all the fun out it. That plus the fact that this little creative endeavor is costing us (the taxpayers) a pretty penny. Yeah, we're tired of that, too!
  • toho
    What bothers me about all of this is people take one snippet (it cost 2.5 million to air during the Super Bowl), and instantly form an opinion one way or another without looking any further. These ads are part of a larger campaign that, if effective, will save the government (our taxes), @ $200 million dollars in door to door follow-ups because people don't fill out the form. And that campaign costs $10 Million.

    So is that worth it to put the ad in front of 106 million people? Spend $10 Million to save $200 Million? Hmm, I'd say yes, if it works. If we're all grown adults, there wouldn't need to be so much of an expenditure taken after the fact because we'd perform the civic duty and send the goddamn form in.

    Did you like your $300 tax cut check over the last 6 years? We haven't even started to pay for those yet. Look deeper people, please.
  • Calvin
    If the census was not trying to pry too deeply into my life then I might fill it out and send it back. This kind of ad just reinforces what I already detest about Washington and Hollywood.
  • I think Rachel Harris stands out the best here. Michael Hitchcock also does good.
  • ttams
    is Ed Begley Jr's character a spoof of James Cameron?
  • HumanParaquat
    I thought the same thing. It has to be.
  • hailstate
    Wow that was incredibly lame and tedious. Has Jennifer Coolidge been remotely funny in anything since American Pie?
  • i'm with you. i don't find these spots funny or relevant.

    and they sure won't speak to the people who distrust the census, the very people that the govt. needs to comvince to participate.
  • MonsterKilledThePilot
    These are hilarious.
  • brainpoo
    I think they're funny. The 'Get me a pair of left handed scissors' for some reasons made me laugh especially.
  • A commercial starring a bunch of older white people talking quietly? Of COURSE it will connect with ethnic audiences!
  • Gabby
    What is killing me is that the one Latina Character Danya is played by a white person! Were there no Latina actresses available in LA to play the role? With a title snapshot of America it certainly doesn't represent the America I know. Perhaps this is rectified in the future commercials?
  • anon
    regardless of whether it connects, it's really funny and entertaining, as christopher guest usually is.
  • Oh wait silly me...there's also a token black female included in your banner image.
  • brian
    It's strange how his aesthetic and actors have been co-opted and used in the ads for cable or satellite or whatever. When I saw this, I thought it was another one of those. (Kind of funny to click 'post as Guest' on this post)
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