Super Bowl ad winners and losers

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The "Chevy Happy Grad" ad will appear during the Super Bowl broadcast on Feb. 5, 2012. (Photo courtesy of MCT)
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(MCT) — To the showrooms, America! Automobile advertising dominated Sunday's Super Bowl XLVI, with everything from apocalypse-defying Chevy trucks to a vampire-killing Audi. Meanwhile, Clint Eastwood, Chrysler and General Electric pushed economic recovery and patriotism during the marketing 'n' football extravaganza, while Budweiser and the NFL delivered history lessons.

Pop culture references fizzled (Ferris Bueller) and sparkled (Twinkies), while the E-Trade baby and Careerbuilder.com chimps did their usual crowd-pleasing things. Oh, and GoDaddy, once again, delivered its particular version of class.

Hail: Volkswagen Beetle Premise: Couch-bound pooch sees the new Beetle passing by but is too fat to chase. On treadmill and in pool and elswehere, with James Brown backing him, the dog does Jane Fonda proud, and eventually he breaks through, tearing off after that vehicle.

Why it works: It's not last year's pint-sized Darth Vader masterpiece, but it is a winner, showcasing the car, a cute dog -- and, in the surprise coda, more "Star Wars": Creatures at the cantina judging Super Bowl ads just like we do in our living rooms.

Hail: Chevy Sonic Premise: The cute little micro-car undertakes a series of stunts, from a barrel-roll jump to appearing in an OK Go music video. The kicker is seeing it float gently toward earth in a skydive.

Why it works: Last year saw a stink bomb of an ad for another small Chevy, the Cruze Eco's mockery of old folks. This year, with bold imagination and tight visual storytelling, it hits the aspirations of its target demographic perfectly -- and infuses the car with feisty personality.

Fail: Budlight Platinum Premise In two early-game spots, Bud Light tries to sell us its new, premium product, with 6 percent alcohol, a purportedly smoother taste, and a blue bottle that apparently glows like a UFO.

Why it doesn't work: This is beer, right? Yet it's being sold, as the product name implies, more like a credit card. We're all for Bud Light moving away from the broad, carnival-sideshow slapstick of years past. But ads so sterile hardly suggest a flavorful beer.

Fail: Cadillac XTS, GE turbines Premise: Cadillac tries to prove it's got a performance vehicle by taking us to a test track. GE features workers on its big turbines and draws the heretofore ignored turbine-cold beer connection.

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