all things considered
Nursery rhyme attack ads
Like death, taxes and Web surfers with strong opinions about The View, negative campaign ads are an inevitable force. Shortly before the midterm elections, NPR's All Things Considered spoke with two of the men (Dennis Steele and Scott Sanders) who lend their dark, ominous voices to those attack ads, and you can listen to the interview here. I know what you're thinking: if I can't stand those ads, why the heck would I want to listen to the voiceover artists talk about them?
Tell you what: skip to about three minutes into the interview and you'll see why. They asked the men to read nursery rhymes using their "attack ad" voice, and the result is not only pretty damn funny, it also shows how silly these ads can be, and that slapping a spooky voice and some foreboding music over something can make just about anything seem scary. Most of us probably roll our eyes when these negative ads flash across out TV screens, but listening to someone attack the likes of Humpty Dumpty with the same venom as they would someone running for congress proves that these ads are actually much more ludicrous than we thought.
Completely unrelated, but interesting to me, nonetheless: in the nursery rhyme "Humpty Dumpty," Humpty is never once referred to as an egg.
TV Squad Hot Topics
Most Popular Articles
From Our Partners
- American Idol Recap: The Day the Music Died
- American Idol: What Did You Think of Day 2 of Hollywood Week?
- Pilot Scoop: CBS Orders Comedy from Melissa McCarthy, Starring Her Husband
- Happy Endings Exclusive: Sunny Mary Elizabeth Ellis Makes [Spoiler] Pregnant!
- Pilot Scoop: NBC's Frontier Corrals Bridget Regan, Ethan Embry and Jake McLaughlin
- More From TVLine
- Last Night on Late Night: Men Are Now Terrified of Sleeping with Michelle Dockery
- Melissa McCarthy Lands CBS Pilot, Husband Ben Falcone Will Star
- George Lucas Now Actively Trolling Fanboys with All His Might
- Portlandia's Getting a Book
- Jenna Fischer and Rita Wilson Join Jeff Probst's Indie Movie
- More from Vulture
