13184_UM_9428_commercials3
Three commercials are shown: United States Air Force, Vitalis hair gel, and Gleem toothpaste. Cartoon air planes soars through the sky over London, the Statue of Liberty in New York City and China. A cartoon character is strapping himself up in a fighter jet. A narrator asks the viewers if they're between the ages 19 and 26. He suggests, if in that age rage, to join the United States Air Force. He mentions the benefits are wages higher than $5,000 a year, flying over the world, and becoming a lieutenant after air force school. The commercial ends with a song and cartoon fighter jets soaring through the sky and leaving a smoke trail. The next commercial is for Vitalis hair gel. It begins with a cartoon knight slicking his hair back with grease. Another knight has messy hair but uses Vitalis non-grease gel to groom it. The Knights are on their knees before a lovely princess who has to choose between them. She feels the first knight's hair and is repulsed by his amount of grease. She feels the next knight, who used Vitalis, and chooses him. Instantly it switches from a cartoon to real life and the princess and knight turn into regular people. The Gleem toothpaste commercial begins with a mother and her son sitting at the kitchen table. The son runs out of the door because he needs to buy a tuxedo for prom. The mother is disappointed that he didn't brush his teeth after his meal. Gleem markets itself as a toothpaste that can be use at anytime to battle germs.