How the Super Bowl Breaks All the Advertising Rules

America post Staff
5 Min Read


Everything is bigger at the Super Bowl, including the price tags. In 2026, that’s up to $10 million for a 30-second ad. Ten. Million. Dollars. And advertisers couldn’t get enough. NBC sold out five months early—the fastest sellout in Super Bowl history—for half a minute of old-fashioned, anachronistic, 20th century TV advertising.

In 1967, a Super Bowl commercial cost $42,500. Adjusted for inflation, that would be about $383,000 today. Prices have doubled in the past decade alone. This is not a market keeping pace with the economy. This is a market on fire.

Even VaynerMedia’s Gary Vee, TV’s self-appointed mortician, backtracks when the Big Game arrives. While insisting all linear advertising is “overpriced,” he admits that Super Bowl advertising is the opposite: “The best deal in marketing. Like, not even close… a steal!” 

The contradictions are as obvious as they are important.

Personalization? Don’t know her

We say advertising must be personalized. Super Bowl ads are the definition of mass marketing: 127 million people, no targeting, no segmentation, no first-party data enrichment. Just a single creative bet placed in front of half the eyeballs in America.

We say digital is the future. Super Bowl advertising is traditional television in its purest form: a commercial in a linear broadcast, consumed in real time, with no skip button in sight.

We say TV is dead. Every year, addled digital marketers point out that for the same price as a Super Bowl spot, you could have had 8,000 influencer posts or 9 million banner ads on a platform you’ve never heard of. Exactly.

We say creative doesn’t matter as much as targeting and optimization. Super Bowl advertising is nothing but creative. The media buy is identical for everyone. The only differentiator is the work itself.

We say emotion is less important than performance metrics. Super Bowl ads trade almost entirely in emotion: humor, nostalgia, inspiration, spectacle. The Budweiser Clydesdales don’t come with a QR code.

We think of audiences as fragmented, lonely individuals consuming content alone in the dark on their phones. Super Bowl Sunday is the opposite: bars, living rooms, watch parties. People choosing to experience advertising together, as shared culture.

We say short-form content rules and question anything longer than a few seconds. Yet brands are paying up to $20 million for minute-long spots during Super Bowl 60. Pfizer, OpenAI, and Google are all running 60-second ads. Nike bought 90 seconds. Anheuser-Busch has the most at 2.5 minutes across three brands. 

In an era supposedly defined by shrinking attention spans, advertisers are going longer than Brett Favre.

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