Pepsi, Coca-Cola will not run ads during Super Bowl


Pepsi and Coca-Cola have decided to break tradition and not run TV ads during the Super Bowl next month amid the economic downturn spurred by the coronavirus pandemic. 

Variety first reported Pepsi’s decision last week, with Coca-Cola following on Friday with an announcement that it would not air ads in CBS’s broadcast of Super Bowl LV. 

In a statement shared with The Hill, Coca-Cola said it made the “difficult choice” to “ensure we are investing in the right resources during these unprecedented times.”

“We’ll be toasting to our fellow brands with an ice-cold Coke from the sidelines,” the company said. 

Meanwhile, Pepsi, one of the largest and most reliable sponsors of the football event, opted to not run ads during the game in order to “double down on our existing 12 minutes in the Pepsi Super Bowl Halftime Show in the middle of the Super Bowl,” according to a statement shared with Variety from Pepsi’s vice president of marketing, Todd Kaplan. 

“We are going to build it out like we have never built it out before,” Kaplan said of the halftime show, adding that the decision to cut ads was not influenced by a desire to limit spending. 

Pepsi did not immediately respond to The Hill’s request for additional comment. 

Canadian singer The Weeknd is set to headline the Pepsi-sponsored show, with the music star participating in a Pepsi ad campaign ahead of the Feb. 7 game, the first time a Super Bowl halftime headliner has done so, according to Variety. 

Coca-Cola in 2020 spent about $10 million on commercials in Fox’s broadcast of Super Bowl LIV, according to ad-spending tracker Kantar. 

The decision by Coca-Cola comes after the Atlanta-based company announced in December that it would be cutting nearly 2,200 jobs worldwide, with 1,200 in the U.S., due to declining sales amid the coronavirus pandemic. 

Coca-Cola had been preparing for cutbacks since the summer, when it offered buyouts to nearly 4,000 employees in Canada and the U.S. Earlier in the year, the brand also announced that it would be discontinuing Tab, Odwalla and Zico, CNN reported at the time. 

Variety reported Friday that CBS has yet to announce a sell-out of its game commercial inventory, with the network seeking around $5.5 million for advertising packages. 

Last year’s football game generated about $435 million in ad spending, a new record, according to Kantar.





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