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You try chugging an entire Coca-Cola without belching. Coca-Cola’s iconic 1980 Super Bowl commercial starring "Mean" Joe Greene, the then-defensive tackle for the Pittsburgh Steelers ...
In the spot, “Mean Joe Greene,” which was part of the “Have a Coke and a Smile” ad campaign, a 9-year-old Okon offers the injured and dejected football star a Coke after a rough game.
Pittsburgh Steelers star “Mean” Joe Greene reunited with his co-star from Coca-Cola’s famous “Hey, Kid, Catch!” commercial after nearly 40 years. The duo was brought back together for CB ...
CBS special had ad ranked No. 4 of greatest Super Bowl commercials. The kid who shared a Coke with “Mean Joe” Greene in an iconic 1979 commercial doesn’t mind talking about it, even though ...
In the iconic Super Bowl ad from 1979, a nine-year-old fan shared his Coca-Cola with Pittsburgh Steelers star "Mean" Joe Greene. After Greene drinks the bottle of Coke, he tosses the kid his jersey.
Today we feature Coca-Cola’s 1979 commercial starring Pittsburgh Steelers defensive tackle “Mean” Joe Greene as our marketing moment. The ad, which today is still considered one of the most ...
A lot has changed in 37 years. You just have to look back at the famous 1979 Coca-Cola commercial featuring Pittsburgh Steelers legend "Mean" Joe Greene and the little kid who offered him a Coke ...
Hey kid, did you catch this? A brand new Coke commercial has begun airing, starring Super Bowl champion "Mean" Joe Greene of the Pittsburgh Steelers, fresh from a game, & a fan of his! Let's give ...
Nearly 40 years after it first aired during a Super Bowl, the commercial featuring a battered and exhausted “Mean” Joe Greene and a kid with a bottle of Coke continues to be one of the all ...
“Mean Joe” Greene and the kid whose Coke he gulped down in a memorable 1979 commercial were reunited for a CBS special that airs tonight and looks back on the Super Bowl’s greatest commercial ...
Thanks, Mean Joe!" The 1979 Mean Joe Coke commercial resonated. So 33 years later, Greene is reprising his role, with a few gray hairs in the beard, to pitch Procter & Gamble's Downy Unstopables.
The iconic Coca-Cola ad featuring Pittsburgh Steeler defensive tackle “Mean” Joe Greene and an awe-struck kid was not actually a Super Bowl ad. It debuted nearly three months earlier in the ...