2023 U.S. Open: Ads outnumber golf shots shown on large swaths of USA Network Round 1 coverage from Los Angeles Country Club

The USGA promised to reduce commercial breaks for this week’s U.S. Open at LACC. How is that going for Round 1?

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USGA CEO Mike Whan spoke Wednesday at the U.S. Open about how his organization worked with NBC to reduce the number of ads that will be shown in this year’s coverage, with plans to cut commercial breaks by 30 percent this week.

So … how is that going midway through Round 1 of the Open?

Coverage from Los Angeles Country Club began Thursday on Peacock, then switched to USA Network – which is owned by NBCUniversal Television and Streaming – for most of the afternoon. Listening in from the home office, it was clear there were a lot of commercials. So out came the stop watch.

In the first 12 minutes and 45 seconds of coverage starting at 2 p.m. ET, USA Network showed 15 commercials. That was compared to just 11 golf shots. The network also showed a one-minute, in-broadcast promotion for the USGA, featuring Whan. In all, that was six minutes of commercials (both full-screen and split-screen with the playing-through feature), one minute of promotion and 5 minutes and 45 seconds of actual full-screen golf coverage.

Wanting to make sure that wasn’t an anomaly, the same procedure was repeated starting at 3 p.m., using an even longer window. In the first 24 minutes of coverage starting at 3 p.m., coverage included 20 commercials (in both full-screen and split-screen formats) and 23 full-screen golf shots. That equated to 9 minutes of ads in either format and 15 minutes of full golf coverage.

The ads ran the spectrum, from golf equipment makers to MTV.

Combining those opening coverage windows for the prime hours of 2 p.m. and 3 p.m., that meant there were a total of 34 golf shots shown against 35 commercials.

The longest continuous uninterrupted window showed 15 shots in a row (starting about 3:13 p.m.). Those 15 shots were surrounded by 13 ads in either format divided on either side of the full-screen golf coverage.

The shortest full-screen golf window was just five uninterrupted golf shots, starting at 2:03 p.m. Those five shots were preceded by seven ads and were followed by the 1-minute USGA promotion. Then came six more full-screen golf shots, then eight more ads.

Coca-Cola’s heartwarming Christmas commercial, directed by Taika Waititi, will make you cry

We swore we couldn’t cry at a Coke ad, yet here we are.

I swore I wouldn’t get worked up watching this Coca-Cola commercial, as it violates my self-imposed rules A) not to get emotional watching a commercial and B) not get sucked into Christmas stuff before we’ve even hit Thanksgiving.

Yet here I am, blubbering like a big dumb Christmas baby.

The ad is directed by Oscar-winner Taika Waititi, so at least I can take comfort in the fact that I’ve been emotionally sucker-punched by a master auteur. See, it’s his filmmaking prowess that has me sniffling away my Christmas tears. It’s not the holiday spirit. I’m a Grinch, you hear me? I am a Grinch!

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We can’t believe the editing on this powerful new Nike ad

Megan Rapinoe narrates this spot called ‘You Can’t Stop Us’ about the enduring power of sports.

Nike released a new 90-second spot this week on the enduring power of sport. With Megan Rapinoe narrating, “You Can’t Stop Us” tells a powerful story about how sports will live on, no matter the circumstances, no matter the form they take.

Whether it’s an Olympic race with the world watching, or a ball dunked in a pool during a summer day, we will find a way to compete.

What’s perhaps most impressive about the commercial, however, is the seamless editing that shows how all sport is linked, and how similar all athletes are, even if they’re competing in different arenas, different games, whatever. We’re all tied together. And no, I have no idea how they seamlessly linked all this footage.

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Watch: Alvin Kamara, Drew Brees star in new Mardi Gras-themed Super Bowl ad

New Orleans Saints superstars Drew Brees and Alvin Kamara won featured roles in a Super Bowl commercial advertising the #NFL100 campaign.

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Alvin Kamara is resplendent, dressed in black and gold, bobbing and weaving through traffic with the football held high and tight against his chest. The crowd is pressing in on him with a wall of masked opponents blocking his way. So he turns and flips the ball back to his quarterback, on a trick play, setting Drew Brees up to pass from a protected position. It’s all something we’ve seen before in recent games.

Except it’s not a game. It’s Carnival season. Kamara has swapped his helmet and shoulderpads for a gorgeous leather jacket and colorful beads, and Brees is riding high in a Mardi Gras float. All the theatrics are part of a commercial advertising the NFL100 initiative, which will be shown in the hours leading up to Super Bowl LIV between the Kansas City Chiefs and San Francisco 49ers. See it for yourself in this exclusive clip from the NFL:

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