Share:
Add to Favorites   |  

Stupid Advertising: Harrison Ford for Equifax

154 views

...only to discover his identity had already been stolen by a Correllian brigand in a galaxy far, far away.

Click the image for the full (stupid) ad.

This is a test using rich text formatting and html links. It's the generic "company" ad that should appear on all posts with the Company category if they don't have an ad attached to a specific company.

Post a comment

Comments:

7
user-pic

"In the movie Terminator, Arnold Schwarzanegger turns to Smith & Wesson to exterminate what's-her-name!" Who cares what happens in the movies? It doesn't relate at all to how things work in real life!
Oh, wait a minute, I forget it's the 21st Century and people are sheep who will consume anything they see a celebrity endorsing.
Never mind.

user-pic

That look upon Harrison Ford's face is the look of a man who realized that he has sold his soul.

Speaking of selling your soles:

http://images.google.com/images?q=i,+robot+converse&svnum=...

Anyone remember Will Smith's shameless plug for converse? "Yeah man, vintage 2005"

user-pic

"The Net" with Sandra Bullock...

user-pic

At least Wayne's World was up front about it.

user-pic

Not only is it a bad tie in, it's false advertising. These credit watch services do not prevent identity theft. They are remedial and they only alert you to fraud after it has occurred. If you want to stop identity theft, you should freeze your credit, not buy these scam products.

user-pic

Good point, Chris, part of the irony is how shockingly little equifax provides for Identity Theft prevention.

Equifax holds many people by the balls as far as their credit goes, you'd atleast figure that they could extend the generosity to have their computer system be a bit more advanced to flag potential identity fraud when it happens. We know they can do it because its easy: Address conflicts often are the first sign-- it wouldn't take a google specialist to design a way to determine that someone is having problems and identify them immediately.