Best commercial of the Bowl

Yep...that was my favorite also. Totally agree. Touched me in a way that I've only been touched a few times in my life. The ad was good. Paul Harvey was great. I really miss him on the radio. And that's.... the rest of the story...
 
yea, nothing like a government subsidized worker riding around in a $70,000 pickup that represents this country today. Farm subsidies are one of the most misused and abused government pork there is. I'm surprised they didn't show the truck hauling ethanol to a fuel company
 
I'd say Budweiser topped the dodge commercial.... that excerpt about a farmer was great when Harvey did it but using it for a commercial IMHO cheapens it... I've never liked it when a person or company talks about God while trying to sell me something.

NOTE it isn't the talking about God that I have a problem with but rather the trying to profit while doing so.
 
yea, nothing like a government subsidized worker riding around in a $70,000 pickup that represents this country today. Farm subsidies are one of the most misused and abused government pork there is. I'm surprised they didn't show the truck hauling ethanol to a fuel company


Spare, you're right, there are plenty of people like that.. (my boss is one of them)... but NJ is known as the Garden State because of all the truck farms. I know at least 3 people personally that would love to get government subsidys but cannot for one reason or another.. and they bust their hump every day to earn a living for themselves and their family.
 
And that is the majority of farmers in this country, that is why family farms are disappearing at an alarming rate for over three decades now.
Corporate owned mega farms are what is being mostly subsidized today.
 
my mothers family were farmers, they didn't own farms, they just worked one them(tobacco farms in Greensboro, NC). Most of the farms were family business that were inherited. The owners lived in the family house(usually very big), and every one in their family had new vehicles every year, and new tractors in the fields. But when you talked to them, they always complained about not having any money. When one of them went bankrupt, you heard them talking about how tough it was to run a farm, when you looked around(especially at the auction), you could see a pile of wasted money. A lot of small farms are sucked in by the temptations of low interest loans subsidized by our government, amassing huge dept(similar to the student loan issue). Competition takes out a bunch of smaller farms, but poor business practices, bad spending habits, and true arrogance takes out just as many. You can always tell when a farmer is complaining about the price of something, his mouth is moving.
 
I'd say Budweiser topped the dodge commercial.... that excerpt about a farmer was great when Harvey did it but using it for a commercial IMHO cheapens it... I've never liked it when a person or company talks about God while trying to sell me something.

NOTE it isn't the talking about God that I have a problem with but rather the trying to profit while doing so.


I agree...
 
Spare, you're right, there are plenty of people like that.. (my boss is one of them)... but NJ is known as the Garden State because of all the truck farms. I know at least 3 people personally that would love to get government subsidys but cannot for one reason or another.. and they bust their hump every day to earn a living for themselves and their family.

That's cuz so much of the subsidy funds are going to mega farms growing corn to shove down our throats as fuel in our cars and boats...but we don't get any money to help us fix 'em when the ethanol screws 'em up...:cen:
 
I think the farmer commercial was focused on hard working Americans in general that's what I took for it...plus Paul Harvey is the man .. I grew up listening to his radio antics
 
my mothers family were farmers, they didn't own farms, they just worked one them(tobacco farms in Greensboro, NC). Most of the farms were family business that were inherited. The owners lived in the family house(usually very big), and every one in their family had new vehicles every year, and new tractors in the fields. But when you talked to them, they always complained about not having any money. When one of them went bankrupt, you heard them talking about how tough it was to run a farm, when you looked around(especially at the auction), you could see a pile of wasted money. A lot of small farms are sucked in by the temptations of low interest loans subsidized by our government, amassing huge dept(similar to the student loan issue). Competition takes out a bunch of smaller farms, but poor business practices, bad spending habits, and true arrogance takes out just as many. You can always tell when a farmer is complaining about the price of something, his mouth is moving.

I agree with you on most everything you said. But you have to consider also that farmers are not, were never meant to be, "businessmen". I think you hit the nail on the head with your "poor business practices" comment.
Farmers are people that have a gift for growing things.. And while I agree that there are abuses in every family owned business, it's kind of hard to point the finger solely at the farmer. For every new tractor, car, combine, front end loader, house, etc, etc, etc, that a farmer has there was someone selling it to them that was purely after their commission or salery, and the fact that the farmer couldn't pay didn't make a hill of beans difference to them. Yes, I agree that there are abuses with farmers, but show me an industry, any industry, that doesn't have one.

To my way of thinking farmers are a gift from God. They grow the food that keeps me and my family alive. It's kind of hard to fault that.
 
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