Commercials Made With Fiverr

kingfish

Champion of Awesome
Sep 25, 2007
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So the Australian Burger King made a commercial solely from Fiverr gigs. This is pretty cool and shows you can make an inexpensive commercial if you're created and if you wanted to do some advertising on TV or youtube. This whole commercial probably cost less than $100 to put together.

“The Stunner is back” – With the help of users from Fiverr.com

As you are no doubt already aware, Hungry Jack’s (aka Burger King in Australia) turned to the incredible creative talent on Fiverr to look for material to use in their brand new TV commercial!

If you haven’t seen the finished product yet, it’s right here:
Hungry Jack’s $5 Advert, Showing on all Good TV Screens Across Australia Now! | The Official Fiverr.com Blog

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K-C6CVnNd28]The $5 Experiment: The Stunner Is Back 30" TV Ad - YouTube[/ame]
 


LOL thats sick.

So from their $30 bux investment they will prolly make $5mil. +
 
Maybe they can hire a lawyer for $5 to defend themselves from the trademark suit over their logo which they clearly stole from Burger King.

That's an awesome commercial. In another thread I posted about how you can get a lot from fiverr if you use it for weird and quirky content and not just link building.
 
bunch of cheap fucks being exploited by a mega corporation for profit. cool.

Bunch of "cheap fucks" decided that instead of attending ridiculous we are the 99% demonstrations, it might be cool to actually make some money. Someone else decided to do business with them. Everyone happy.

But its not that easy. It can never be that easy. There always has to be some retarded socialist talking about how those poor people didnt know what they were worth, got totally abused, evil corporations, major whine. People like you deserve to pay every fuckin cent they pay in taxes. So that those cheap fucks can get reimbursed for the evil mega corporations bring upon them.
 
Well, that's it, screw all those media guys and their undeserved salaries.
 
I'm sure they still paid some production company tens-hundreds of thousands to produce that ad.