Find Money Clip Commercial
Money Clip Commercial Resource
1 Money Clip Commercial Loading
2 Money Clip Commercial Loading
3 Money Clip Commercial Loading
4 Money Clip Commercial Loading
5 Money Clip Commercial Loading
6 Money Clip Commercial Loading
Money Clip Commercial Resource in Questions
So, Is Geico Ever Gonna Make A Good Commercial? The gecko got old once he got a voice, the cavemen, don't get me started, and now this money clip with googly eyes? How does it appeal to people?

Whitney M replied: "cuz the lizard is so cute"

car253 replied: "They distract people from the fact that they are buying insurance. Who knows if they will make a good commercial or not."

Da Man replied: "Yup like the time when the caveman was searching for treasure on a beach for a blond babe, and just left and had that look on his face. Yup thats what I do when Gieco comes on...... But Service is alright tho"

bud68 replied: "Apparently it works. It's got you concerned with their commercials instead of their crappy insurance."

bgznkitties replied: "Haven't seen the googly eyes thing, but if American advertising would start taking risks (like the Brits, for example), we could maybe get some decent, hysterically funny advertising on the air generally... not just Geico. American advertisers (read: corporations) are such prudes because they're afraid of losing business if they say the politically incorrect thing. Truth is, whenever they take risks, the public LOVES it."

smartconsumer replied: "IMO GEICO makes the best, funniest commercials, along with AFLAC."

is anyone ridiculously sick of those dumb geico commercials? the gecko cavemen and now this money clip. its all so gay. and i hear geico sucks anyways.

AlliGAtors replied: "The gecko is usually funny, but the stupid money with the eyes is lame. I did like the caveman in the airport commercial. I have had Geico for years and it's ok. Haven't had to "use" it yet. (knock on wood)"

Mr. Bad Mutha Fu... replied: "Meh, the cavemen is getting a little old. The gecko will never go out of style (HE IS COOL) And the money clip is just the most annoying thing ever. And yes Geico does suck. I prefer to have an tangible agent who I can beat up if I don't approve....lol jk...nah Im serious."

what is this song? Gieco commercial? the one with the "money you could be saving" where its the bundle of money with the plastic eyes on it. at the end of the commercial it plays a clip of a sort of electro song

feelflows replied: "Somebody's Watching Me. Its a cover of Rockwell's song by Mysto and Pizzi. "

How can i advertise my really small buisness? I make clips. I'm just a teen with not too much money, so obviously, no commercials or blimps or billboards. I already wear my hairclips to school, and bring up that i make them. No one seems interested enough to come to me and ask, though. Any ideas? Thanks!

Zam89 - Breeding is a strategy replied: "* try making a really small website. * no business is small. * meet some genuinely interested people, like storekeepers or hair saloon where the product is more used. * do promotions. buy 3 get 1 free."

niklas052494 replied: "Pass out cheap versions to people, lie and say celebs use them :P"

<3 animal addict <3 replied: "As was already mentioned: you can put up a website... I'm not sure if you can advertise in newspapers for free, but if you can; there's another idea... Sorry, that's all I got... Good Luck! :)"

Where replied: "Some of the ways you can advertise your business are: 1. Post an article about your business on related blogs and get free visitors and back links 2. Submitting to directories 3. Free classifieds 4. Forums Send an email with more information about your business to for free help on finding new customers and increasing sales."

90's cereal commercial that aired about marrying the cereal box??? theres a commercial that aired a while ago, where there was a brother and sister eating cereal. the boy says: "I love _______. (whatever the cereal was)" the siter says: "Well, why dont you marry it.." the boys says: "I think i will." Then the commercial continues with this kid marrying the cereal. do any of you know what cereal this was.. ive got money on this so any answers, or maybe a URL for a video clip of it would help...

xxmachina replied: "I saw a movie where a woman had relations with a cream-o-wheat box character, does that count?"

Villa replied: "I think its that peanut butter crunch cereal. Couldn't find the video but this site mentions it with an image of the boy with the cereal getting married. "

real estate developers share of the bailout money? Here's a clip from the AP story:Commercial real estate developers said Monday they also are petitioning the government for support from the $700 billion rescue fund. The Real Estate Roundtable said an estimated $400 billion of commercial real estate mortgages will come due by the end of 2009 without adequate refinancing options. Industry officials said thousands of office buildings, hotels, shopping centers and other commercial buildings could be headed into foreclosure or bankruptcy unless the government provides support. Jeffrey D. DeBoer, president of the Real Estate Roundtable, said the industry has written to federal officials asking to be included in a new $200 billion loan program being run by the Federal Reserve, with support from the financial bailout program, to bolster the market for credit card debt, auto loans and student loans. DeBoer said the commercial real estate industry would like to see that program expanded to cover their properties or have a similar program begun to help their industry. So I had to ask Banks car companies and now maybe commercial real estate developers... So where will the government getting around to helping those in real need... American families??? Well said Toopy but I still have to point out these are the very same people who landed us in this mess and they rather then step-up and try to fix the mess they made the go whining about needing more money because we little guys can no longer afford their services.

Wha-'tis the song from the newer Geico commercials? ....the money-clip with muppet eyes.... ...it's some scuzzy electro-song. Know it?

butterlover55 replied: ""Somebody's Watching Me" - Beatfreakz"

? Stranger in Indiana replied: "The original song is by Rockwell(ft Michael Jackson- the part that goes 'i always feel like, somebody's watchinnnn' me) The one you hear on the geico commercial is a more techno-remix by Mysto & Pizzi. (mystoandpizzi.com) you can get a Free download of the remixed-techno Mysto&Pizzi song from the Commercial at geico.com, click the link below."

does the off clip-on work? I keep seeing the commercials for it and I thought it would be great for my kids but I don't want to spend the money for it if it doesn't work.

travisj027 replied: "I don't think it is that expensive, and I think if you go the website they have coupons for it. And from what I hear it does work pretty well. I'd give it a try but I don't go outside that much. :) Good luck!"

How will raising taxes improve our economy? A batch of economy-wide stats was released Friday morning, covering retail sales, industrial production, import prices, and consumer confidence. The verdict? Its a 2 percent economy. Call it Goldilocks 2.0. Might the current financial turmoil throttle back growth a little more in the next six months? Yes, perhaps. Will there be some negative earnings surprises, especially from financial companies? Sure. But the bears would have us believe the sub-prime credit virus heralds the end of the world. They are wrong. Remember this: Our free-market capitalist economy is resilient and durable. It has proven time and again that it can take a punch. Sure, recession probabilities have increased. But so what? Weve had virtually uninterrupted prosperity for twenty-five years, going back to the supply-side economy and technological boom launched by President Ronald Reagan. Since then, weve experienced 93 positive GDP quarters and only 5 negative ones. That makes for a truly phenomenal batting average. Consider this: Marginal tax rates are low. Inflation is low. Interest rates are low. And the world economy remains strong. The stock market which I still believe is the best barometer of the health of business and the economic future has behaved surprisingly well during this difficult stretch of turbulence. In fact, the sum total of the so-called bear assault is only a 4.5 percent correction from Dow 14,000 and other index peaks registered two months ago. Yes, profits are getting sloppy. And yes, there are some credit shocks out there yet to be revealed. However, the Federal Reserve will reduce the cost of money by bringing down its basic target rate on Tuesday. President Bush will veto any Democratic tax hikes. And at the margin, the Iraq War story is taking a turn for the better. Meanwhile, American entrepreneurs are still working hard. Speaking of next Tuesday, the best thing the Fed can do is deliver a big-bang, shock-and-awe rate cut that would bring the basic fed funds target 50 basis points lower to 4.75 percent. At the same time, it should lob a full percentage point off the discount lending rate, cutting it from 5.75 to 4.75 percent. This would be a confidence-inspiring move for all concerned: borrowers, lenders, businesses, consumers, and mortgage holders. Not only will slashing the cost of money add significant new liquidity to the economy, it will raise asset values across the board. The Fed also might think about setting up a special facility for non-bank lending institutions that are experiencing a liquidity squeeze. Perhaps also a temporary liquidity facility for commercial paper lenders. The asset-backed commercial paper market is vital to funding many of the daily operations of businesses across the country, and its this market that has been hardest hit. Such monetary front-loading would be very powerful, indeed. However, if the Fed goes small with only quarter-point reductions for fed funds and the discount rate, many investors will have an incentive to withhold money while they wait for interest rates to finally bottom at much lower levels later this year or next. In other words, a timid Fed action might actually prolong and deepen the economic slowdown. This is not a time for small-ball. Its time for Bernanke and Company to go big. And lets not forget that taxes are just as important as money. President Bush and Treasury man Henry Paulson should absolutely squash all the Washington rumors of tax hikes, in particular a cap-gains tax increase. If investors expect a hike in the cap-gains tax, they will have every incentive to launch a massive wave of stock market selling. Needless to say, this would be utterly calamitous for the whole economic picture. The animal spirits may have had their wings clipped a bit by the credit crunch, but with the right tax and money policies there is still plenty of sizzle and juice in this story. Its very easy to be totally pessimistic and bearish right now, but thats precisely why I will avoid falling into that trap. Optimists are winners. Pessimists are losers

Dogsnoop replied: "Raising taxes usually does just the opposite."

vtsztpu replied: "A taxpayer who votes for a democrat is like a chicken voting for colonel Sanders."

univee replied: "I'm with you, though I think you are too verbose by half. We need to lower the taxes for working people and poor people, and we need to make sure the wealthy, who benefit more than all of us from the current laws, really do pay their fair share. But like Leona Helmsley reminded us, taxes are for little people. If I say that, I'm a commie, you know. But Leona said that, and she should know. So yes, lower taxes, and make sure the ones we do pay, go to benefit society rather than line the pockets of the corporations and politcal crooks."

Tom S replied: "Raising taxes always hurts the economy. The taxpayer has less disposable income to spend on goods and services, and less money to save. Thus his/her dependence on government handouts (e.g. welfare) goes up. Now if a corporate executive rakes in 200 million on stock options, and bonuses that's an entirely different situation. This guy should pay a lot of taxes."

makrothumeo2 replied: "Bubba...I'm not here to read your treatises...trim it down."

Mezmarelda replied: "Bill Clinton raised taxes (especially on the rich) when he inherited George Sr's. mess, and the economy rebounded beautifully, and he was the first president in decades to submit a BALANCED BUDGET !"

sunny g replied: "it dont america is going in the shitter every thing is going up in price and the pay wages are not going up to keep up with inflation"

Edge Caliber replied: "People have no money so raising taxes will just cause a collapse, but SPENDING needs to go down and soon because then the pessimists will be right."

Mark F replied: "No need to wright this much, but in general, it is a good idea to have tax $ and revenue in the economy for social programs, or just to keep the government in working order. It would depend on how much taxes are raised, on whom, and what the money is spent on. We shouldn't want any government waist."

brian replied: "income taxes do indeed do serious harm. a carbon tax, however, would help them in the long run. by using a carbon tax to alleviate the costs of new capital, they become more efficient. some taxes are much better than others."

silly-asious replied: "AMEN AMEN AMEN BRAVO From a fellow economist and Capitalist Pig."

Patrioticlib replied: "Raising the taxes on the rich to spend in expanding government services that would generate jobs and buying goods for more prosperity. And entrepreneurs can get in on the action securing government contracts, for a win-win situation for most. Government can buy goods and services on an economy of scale, eliminating the waste of the the small individual transactions( ie healthcare), redundaant paperwork and private business bureaucracies, savin \g far more than what was spent. But conservatives seem bent on a mindless mantra of all taxes are bad. There was a time people understood the principles outlined above and accepted taxes as a cost as well as a benefit in being in a society."

BekindtoAnimals22 replied: "Something I rarely see mentioned is that with the federal tax cuts, the states apparently have lost the share they once received. I don't know what is happening in other states, but where I live the taxes are going way, way up. The property taxes are being protested, the sales tax may go up 2 cents more, cigarette taxes have gone up 46 cents, there are other taxes I'm not familiar with that are being considered. I live in the Midwest where you don't see a lot of protests. They are also considering raising the county tax or tacking a nickel more on the state gasoline tax. There are many ramifications to everything the federal government does. Sorry if that makes me sound like a pessimist. Its just the reality of it."

Ethan M replied: "In a word it won't. No country has ever taxed its self to prosperity."

Kirk replied: "Cutting taxes always strengthens the economy. I'm not sure about lowering interest rates, as there seems to be enough liquidity already. Because of the tax cuts pushed through a few years ago, our national debt has been cut essentially in half. It fell by more than 10% last year alone. As for the rich not paying their fair share, that is a joke. Remember, the idea of progressive taxes was first effectively put into words around 1850 in a book co-written by that lover of freedom Karl Marx. The top 10% of income earners in this country pay 50% of the income taxes taken in by the federal government. Where in our constituition does it say that all men are created equal, except if they are productive. Under our tax system, the more productive you are the less fairly you are treated. I would like to point out that I'm not part of that top 10%, or even in the top 40% for that matter, but I am trying to get there. Edit Social programs are not helpful to anyone. The war on poverty is a good example. The U.S. has spent more than 11 trillion dollars on this war, that should actualy be named the war on freedom. Before the war on poverty, the percentage of the poeple considered poor was falling each and every year. This drop stopped as soon as we started "helping"(sic) the poor. Government hand outs have never lifted anyone out of poverty. The people that have risen out of poverty, did it on their own. As for the states that have lost tax dollars, that is wrong as well. I live in one of the poorest states, and yet, our state legislators are argueing on how to spend the additional money that has filled their coffers since 2002. Poverty in the U.S. is a behavioral problem, not a societal, or economic issue.....Little off topic, but those two topics put a burr under my blanket."

g replied: "you're mainly talking capital gains tax here... and it was just as "high" in the 90s as they want to raise it now? it wasn't all doom and gloom then? this article, whoever wrote it, is talking out of both sides of it's mouth and clearly has a bias... mainly "don't take my money"... in their words: "Remember this: Our free-market capitalist economy is resilient and durable. It has proven time and again that it can take a punch."... and the tax increase they are talking about would be nothing more than a "small jab" as punches go... talk about a lot of words not saying much... EDIT: and crying about how a tax increase would doom the market is being a pessimist/loser"

More Links
More Tags
Money Clip Commercial © 2009

Credit Cards  |  Emo Names  |  Pickup Lines
Report Abuse to: abuse(at)5nxs.com