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OK before everyone says this question was stupid, there have been some stupid lawsuits over stupid things. Example do you remember the thing with the pepsi points? Well pepsi had a commercial that made a joke if you got 100,000,000 pepsi points or so you could trade them in for a jet...some kid actually collected ALL those pepsi points and pepsi would not give him a jet so he sued pepsi for a few million dollars or so...

Anyway the question is, anyone ever see Tag commercials, well obviously (and yes I tried it), the commercials are always if you use the product beautiful women try and tackle you...could someone sue Tag because of its "failure" to work?

2006-09-20 15:39:28 · 11 answers · asked by D 4 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

11 answers

Sure, you pay tens of thousands for your lawyer to sue them and they will tie it up in court for months and years with their on-staff lawyers and see who quits first.

2006-09-20 15:42:10 · answer #1 · answered by BobTheBizGuru 4 · 2 0

In this world today you can sue just about anybody for anything. I am sure that you could probably find some lawyer who would be willing to take the case.

2006-09-20 22:54:28 · answer #2 · answered by storm1 1 · 0 0

I don't know, but I do know how you feel.

One thing that has irritated me a lot recently is all these online ads for True.com, a personals site. They always ONLY show super hot looking babes in their ads that look like they want to **** your brains out at first sight...

but the truth is REAL women in REAL personals ads look nothing like that. In the real world, maybe one in 25 women look that perfect. It's false advertising, plain and simple. It's a rip off and a scam. There are a lot of attractive "average-looking" or "plain-jane" women out there, but you won't see them advertising with their pictures!

2006-09-20 22:51:31 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

No, They never say you will guaranteed get a woman. They simply imply it will happen by the actions in the commercial.

2006-09-20 22:43:30 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Makes sense to me, but common sense goes out the window when it comes to big dollar business.

2006-09-20 22:44:35 · answer #5 · answered by Steve B 3 · 0 0

theres proboly some kind of fine print to cover an issue like that

2006-09-20 23:52:43 · answer #6 · answered by Angela D 1 · 1 0

No, they also ran a disclaimer at the bottom of the screen when that aired.

2006-09-20 22:42:33 · answer #7 · answered by Justsyd 7 · 2 0

i believe that small text quickly flashes across the screen that says dramatization or something like that

2006-09-20 22:42:21 · answer #8 · answered by ramodeys1990 2 · 2 0

No it wouldn't hold up in court

2006-09-20 22:44:26 · answer #9 · answered by couchP56 6 · 1 0

I dont think cuz its kinda like sarcasm.

2006-09-20 22:43:01 · answer #10 · answered by willy9e 2 · 0 1

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