The Most Hyped and Anticipated List of Leaked 2019 Superbowl Commercials You Must See

Throughout the years, the Superbowl commercials have sometimes eclipsed the actual game. Every year people wait for the biggest and most expensive commercials of the entire year. Sometimes the commercials live up to the hype and other times they just fall flat. From the Talking Bud frogs, to the iconic Clydesdales, the unforgettable ‘What’s up’, The Bugs Bunny and Michael Jordan classic, The Doritos Time Machine, The Wendy’s Where’s the Beef?, The Dancing Baby, The Michael Jordan and Larry Bird H-O-R-S-E game,  Mean Joe Green – Hey Kid Catch from 1979, The 2014 Puppy Clydesdale, The Snickers Betty White and so much more!

This year we have consolidated and previewed all the best 2019 Superbowl commercials that will be airing tomorrow for a global audience all around the world! I’m not going to lie, I am definitely more excited for the commercials than the actual game as are many others. The expected viewership of tomorrow’s big is estimated to be 100 million people.

In the past 10 years the price of a Superbowl commercial spot has doubled from 2.4 million dollars for a 30 second spot in 2007, to today where a 30 second commercial will cost you around 5.25 million dollars! Just to give a little historical perspective back in 1967 a 30 second commercial spot only cost an advertiser a petty 42 thousand dollars!  There is no sports event in the United States that even comes close to the price tags of the Superbowl. Hopefully for these advertisers, it will be money well spent.

Here are the commercials that have been leaked so far. Some of them look amazing while others possibly may fall completely flat.  You be the judge and let us know in the comments which Super Bowl commercial is your favorite! Enjoy!

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Meet Budweiser’s New Baby Clydesdales!

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The Clydesdale breed of horse is iconic. Americans have adopted the gentle giants as cultural symbols of good old fashioned grit, strength, hard work, and of course, beer. Anheuser-Busch, the owners and brewers of the Budweiser brand of beer, chose Clydesdale horses to be the company’s mascot and included them in clever marketing advertisements. Over the years the ads have propelled the breed to new heights and they have since become internationally recognized and beloved by generations.

These days the Budweiser Clydesdales are bred to an exact standard at the Warm Springs Ranch near Boonville, Missouri. Visitors to the ranch can tour the grounds and facilities, and even get up close and personal with some of the 70 horses that call it home. To qualify as a Budweiser Clydesdale, a horse must have a snowy white face and four white legs. Their bodies should be bay colored, which is a rich reddish-brown tinged type of coat, with a darker mane and tail.

Over the years, hundreds of Clydesdale mares have given birth to baby foals with the help of their proud caretakers and birthing coaches. The young colts and fillies can be seen running wild among older horses in the pastures and fields on the ranch. Many of them are very friendly and one of them even kissed a cameraman in the video in a warm display of open affection. It’s easy to see how and why the horses have endured and become iconic. The young horses at the farm have it good and are absolutely adorable, energetic, and full of character and life.

Clydesdale horses were originally bred to be draught horses; ones who used to haul heavy carts and equipment such as plows. They needed to be exceptionally strong, resilient, and obedient in order to effectively help farmers get stuff done. Their lineage can be traced back to Scotland where the first mention of the name ‘Clydesdale’ was recorded. From there they were brought to the rest of the world where they were vital in efforts to build projects and became known as tough workhorses who provided sheer power, doing the bulk of moving things in the absence of widely available and mechanized machinery. Once gas powered technology came along demand for the horses fell and at one point in the 1970’s they were dying out. Then, in a 1986 Superbowl ad, Budweiser chose to feature the breed in a commercial and a tradition was born.

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