America tunes in to the Super Bowl to watch two things: the best in NFL football, and the best in TV commercials. We love a great commercial just as much as the rest of America, so here are our picks for the Top Ten Best Super Bowl Commercials of All Time.
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This Reebok commercial features NFL player Terry Tate regulating workplace productivity by tackling coworkers in an office setting. It first aired during the 2003 Superbowl.
Bud Light always has clever Super Bowl commercials, and this one is no exception. It opens with guys standing around a pool table as one proclaims that the "fist bump is out." Slapping each other silly, is apparently in, and the rest of the commercial is a slap-happy tribute to the "new fist bump."
The iconic Budweiser frogs commercial begins ambiguously and ends amphibiously. Okay, okay, it was a bad pun - but it is definitely a great commercial.
This classic Superbowl commercial pits two basketball legends against each other in a contest to make the craziest shots. The loser buys the winner lunch, which is presumably a McDonald's Big Mac that pops onto the screen at the end of the commercial.
This ad for Mountain Dew features a guy riding a bike madly chasing down a cheetah. After tackling the cheetah he digs his arm down into the wildcat's stomach and comes up with an empty can of Mountain Dew and says, "Bad Cheetah."
This groundbreaking commercial aired during the 1984 Superbowl to introduce the world to the Apple Macintosh computer. Directed by Ridley Scott, it features drones following a Big Brother-like character who is speaking on screen, and a woman protagonist who throws a sledgehammer at the screen and shatters it.
This recent Super Bowl favorite is a cute spin on Sylvester Stallone's Rocky character with a hard-working Clydesdale horse determined to make the Budweiser draft horse team.
A pet store rabbit and guinea pig try to use a real mouse to get on Blockbuster's website and rent a video. Hilarity - and animated mouse beatings - ensue.
This ingenious ad for Monster.com features children telling the camera what they want to be when they grow up. The job options include "brown noser", "yes man" and "underpaid," prompting adults watching to examine how their current job lines up with their childhood dreams.
Jay Mohr and Jackie Chan star in this Super Bowl ad that flaunts Diet Pepsi's alleged superiority over Diet Coke. Diet Pepsi plays a movie star filming an action movie, and it's lowly stunt double is a can of Diet Coke. It's a creative war of Cola.














