‘Ad failure of the decade’! Super Bowl car insurer ad joking about a male employee ‘whipping’ is criticized for mocking workplace harassment
- Cure Auto Insurance ad aired just before the Super Bowl break
- The ad featured an intense use of a double meaning suggesting harassment
- The commercial was very ridiculed on social media for being inappropriate
- This is not the first time that Cure Insurance has caused controversy during SB
A Super Bowl ad from a regional auto insurance company sparked outrage after it appeared to mock workplace harassment.
The Cure Auto Insurance ad, which aired just before the break – peak audience time, was quickly classified as the “ad failure of the decade” and the “worst Super Bowl ad” on social media.
Some even said he should never have aired, tweeting that someone ‘should have vetoed’ the clip.
The setting for the ad is an office, where a woman sitting behind her desk is approached by an employee and an employee.

Cure Auto Insurance’s Super Bowl ad is drawing a lot of criticism on social media

The ad showed people talking about an ‘opinion’ in a way that suggested workplace harassment
![It ended with the supervisor at the scene saying that she would have 'taken [an] opinion 'if drunk](https://i0.wp.com/i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2021/02/08/14/39025644-9236629-image-a-4_1612793856949.jpg?resize=560%2C274&ssl=1)
It ended with the supervisor at the scene saying that she would have ‘taken [an] opinion ‘if drunk
‘In. Davis, Tommy just brought me to his office and got his opinion, ”said the employee.
“I didn’t get it,” said Tommy. – She liked that. Furthermore, I have a very high opinion. ‘
“Oh, please, it’s not that big,” said the employee, with the double meaning emphasized everywhere.
“She only gave me a second,” said Tommy.
‘Tommy, not everyone in this office wants your opinion,’ replied the supervisor.
‘Okay, well, how about you last week at happy hour when you begged me for my opinion?’ Asked Tommy.
“I had a jar of margaritas. I would have accepted Doug’s opinion, ‘said the supervisor.
Unsurprisingly, the commercial – which appeared to be minimizing harassment in the workplace – did not receive favorable reviews on Twitter.
Ian Schafer wrote that ‘it should never have been approved’ to go on air.







Some made specific mention of the fact that the commercial seemed to mock the harassment in the workplace.
“Mocking sexual harassment in the workplace is not looking good,” tweeted Jenn Sullivan. ‘Just my opinion … it didn’t impress Cure Auto Insurance.’
Another user said it was ‘the worst commercial during the time we are in’ and one said it was the ‘advertising disapproval of the decade’.
James Dwyer undoubtedly had the most biting response, saying that “it was actually written by Louis CK”, who was accused of sexual misconduct and sexual harassment of women.
According to the Fast Company, a 30-second ad in this year’s Super Bowl cost about $ 5.5 million.
This is not the first time that the company has faced controversy with its Super Bowl ads, which seem to seek a shock factor each year.
In 2015, Cure Auto Insurance ran some ads that mocked the Deflategate scandal that was rocking the NFL at the time.
The ads featured a talking and bouncing blue ball and featured the hashtags #DontTouchYourBalls and #LeaveYourBallsAlone.
In 2016, the company’s ad showed a man distracted by a nurse while his father was dying, another ad that at least seems to suggest harassment.
A 2018 ad directly targeted the New England Patriots for not following the rules, ending with an emphatic ‘Go Birds’ in hopes of a Philadelphia Eagles title.
Cure Auto Insurance generates a lot of controversy for a regional company – they only serve drivers in Pennsylvania and New Jersey.