Ninety-year-old comedian Don Rickles "roasting" chestnuts for you. Star chef Bobby Flay, a redhead, making you bread means, yup, gingerbread cookies.
Those are some of the quirky, offbeat scenes in Best Buy's holiday ad campaign that starts hitting TV screens on Sunday.
Once again, the Richfield-based retailer is relying on humor throughout the ads that dream up ways to make the holidays even easier. Other absurd solutions include a turkey basting itself in the oven and a suitcase-wielding Christmas tree singing holiday tunes in a raspy male voice that walks up to your door already decorated.
In the absence of those options, the electronics chain notes that its blue-shirt experts in stores, its free holiday shipping and its "amazing deals" are another way to reduce some of the stress of the season.
Of course, these days many shoppers think that online shopping is the easiest option. But Best Buy is also making a case in the ads that coming to its stores and having its employees help you isn't that hard. The theme of the campaign is "Holiday Gifting Made Easy."
"The holidays can be nerve-racking," Greg Revelle, Best Buy's chief marketing officer, said in a statement. "Our campaign is a fun reminder that Best Buy is here to make shopping easy and enjoyable."
While Best Buy is doing its part to drum up excitement for the season, this is not expected to be a blockbuster holiday for the retailer because of an industrywide lull in electronics sales that have been hurt in particular by a slowdown in smartphones. Best Buy has forecast flat sales for the year.
Haim Mano, a marketing professor at the University of Missouri-St. Louis, said the humor helps add to the notion of ease of shopping. And the choice of celebrities to feature in the ads was also very deliberate.