Peacock will air a “30-second spot” highlighting its new series "Poker Face," starring actor Natasha Lyonne, and it is “set to air during the fourth quarter” of Super Bowl LVII, according to Mollie Cahillane of ADWEEK. The creative leans into the premise of the series, in which Lyonne’s character, Charlie Cale, “can tell when someone is lying.” In the commercial, Lyonne, in character as Cale, “reacts in real-time to Super Bowl spots from brands such as Google and M&M’s that will air during the game as she hangs out in a bar” (ADWEEK, 2/9). An NBCUniversal spokesperson confirmed that the partnerships with Mars and Google were “non-paid creative integrations” (AD AGE, 2/9).
LATE NIGHT: The HOLLYWOOD REPORTER’s Alex Weprin noted Fox News’ Greg Gutfeld is “set to run a 15-second spot promoting his 11 p.m. late night show
SUPERSTAR STATUS: REUTERS' Sheila Dang wrote big-name celebrities are “not uncommon in Super Bowl ads.” But the “level of star power” is unique this year as advertisers “look to unite viewers rather than risk souring the mood with overly heartfelt or controversial messages.” Celebrities from the worlds of music and movies including Ozzy Osbourne and Billy Idol, who appear in a Workday ad about corporate "rockstars," and rapper Jack Harlow, “featured in a spot for Doritos, will hit notes of humor and self-deprecation.” Actor Paul Rudd appears as the Marvel superhero, “reassuring an actual ant that he is not imbibing on the job,” and drinking a Heineken 0.0. In a Super Bowl ad for Diageo’s Crown Royal, Foo Fighters frontman Dave Grohl “sits in a music studio sipping a glass of whiskey” (REUTERS, 2/9).
GREASE IS THE WORD: ADWEEK’s Patrick Kulp reported actor John Travolta is teaming up with T-Mobile for a “minute-long ad in the fourth quarter” with actors Zach Braff, Donald Faison. The brand “previously ran a similar spot with the stars of the NBC sitcom Scrubs last year as a last-minute addition to its two primary Super Bowl ads” starring Miley Cyrus and Dolly Parton. The ad will be T-Mobile’s “10th consecutive outing in the Big Game.” Barring any “11th-hour adds,” it also marks a “somewhat smaller showing than some of the carrier’s previous Super Bowl appearances, which have often consisted of multiple ad buys scattered throughout the broadcast and rafts of A-list names” (ADWEEK, 2/9).