He Gets Us, a $100 million campaign reimagining Jesus’ message, is airing a 60-second “True Greatness” spot at Super Bowl 2025. Learn how the nonprofit Come Near, Jon Batiste’s Love Riot Festival, and AI-driven art are shaping this year’s faith-based outreach. “He Gets Us,” a Christian outreach campaign, has spent millions in advertising and on Sunday will debut two new commercials during the Super Bowl. The campaign’s murky motivations have some This image provided by He Gets Us LLC shows a scene from “Who Is My Neighbor,” the 15-second commercial from “He Gets Us” that debuted at the Super Bowl on Sunday, Feb. 11, 2024. For the second year in a row, a religious Super Bowl ad campaign promised viewers that Jesus “gets us.” But in this scenario, "He" is the center of a marketing campaign that has spread far across the U.S., spanning between billboards, banner ads online, and a forthcoming Super Bowl commercial. Most Super Bowl adverts plug things like fizzy drink and cars, but one of the most talked-about commercials the day after the big game was selling Jesus - and it upset several very different It’s becoming a Super Bowl tradition: He Gets Us, the billion-dollar effort to overhaul the public image of Jesus, the Son of God, will be back on the airwaves during Super Bowl LIX. Greg Miller Viewers who watched Super Bowl 58 took note of a commercial with this tagline: "He Gets Us." This year, the ad campaign will run a 60-second commercial during the first half of the big game. What He Gets Us hosted a similar community event on the Saturday before the Super Bowl last year in Las Vegas, handing out over 1,500 hot meals and groceries to local residents. Current and former NFL More than just Super Bowl commercials, the He Gets Us campaign first surfaced in March 2022 and has been causing waves through TV spots, billboards, and digital ads. A California church created a humorous Doritos ad that aired in 2010 after winning the snack brand’s Super Bowl ad contest. On Sunday, one “He Gets Us” ad will be shown during each half. One will focus on how children demonstrate Jesus’ love, while the other deals with anger, and how Jesus modeled a different way. “He Gets Us,” the ad campaign centered around rebranding Jesus for the contemporary world, will be returning to the Super Bowl in 2025. Come Near, the non-profit that manages the “He Gets Us He Gets Us Super Bowl Primer: See Jesus in the Super Bowl!Learn more about He Gets Us and watch Super Bowl LVII to see Jesus come to The Big Game - He Gets Us "Jesus" Super Bowl LVIII (58) 2024 CommercialThe “He Gets Us” commercial that aired during Super Bowl LVIII (58) 2024 is a poignant and thought-pr Setting a record with a staggering 123.4 million viewers, the Super Bowl was the most-watched American television broadcast in a generation, and all of those Anger is a common motif throughout human history. Whether it rears its head during restaurant altercations, encounters with law enforcement or shouting matches from the fire escapes, this volatile emotion is an evergreen reminder that, as the Rag'n'Bone Man-performed chorus intones, we're all only human. However, amid all the turbulent shouts, fighting and protests, He Gets Us The "He Gets Us" Christian ad campaign made waves during the 2024 Super Bowl game. A spokesperson for the brand explained their message and respond to critics. Watch the two Jesus Super Bowl ads—‘He Gets Us’ campaign comes to the Big Game The ‘Be Childlike’ and ‘Love Your Enemies’ ads continue effort to rebrand Jesus for a mass audience By Screenshot/YouTube/Jamie Bambrick. A pastor in the United Kingdom went viral after he posted a video emphasizing repentance in response to the controversial "He Gets Us" Super Bowl ad that many suggested was endorsing sin. During the recent Super Bowl, two television commercials were aired by the “He Gets Us” campaign to promote Jesus: “Be Childlike” and “Love Your Enemies.” Advertise on TGC Similar ads by the group had been running for more than a year and have appeared on the Grammys telecast and during NCAA March Madness games. A scene from the 30-second Super Bowl ad created by the Servant Foundation for its “He Gets Us” campaign. two ads with a different kind of message are appearing during the Super Bowl
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