Though my photo capablities are really lacking, I have discovered what appears to be a DDR. There is doubling in the extreme upper leaves of the left corn shuck, right wall of the cabin and the entire upper half of the right corn ear and shuck.
The ad agency my wife works for made that commercial. I'm sure they'd be pleased to know you actually watched it, instead of flipping channels or heading for the bathroom.
I wonder how parents would respond if they saw their children mimicking that kid. You know how kids are! Chris
Watch it more closely next time. The children represent adults who feel like their insurance companies treat them like children by not listening to them. That's why the kids are dressed like adults, doing adult things (like smashing their phones!). As for your question..."parental discretion advised".
Ok guys, I like the commercial, and really don't mind the discussion of it here, but I keep getting notifications of replies and instead of them being about how crappy my pictures are, they are about how good a commercial is.
Sorry, Hommer. You're right! The photos need to be a lot better. No one can tell if there is any doubling from them. @Maxfli I got the whole gist of the commercial. The question is, "Will the kids get the same meaning?" I doubt it! Chris
@Hommer Nope! You'll have to try some different spit. If that doesn't work, you'll have to get a better camera. Chris
Why would that differ from anywhere else on a coin? Wouldn't a less found variety be more desirable? If you could have one wide AM cent, which one would that be?
It matters a lot. Look at the 2009 FY cent with over a 100 attributions. Only the skeleton finger is considered significant. 2 or 3 others are interesting (double thumb), the other 96 are meh.
I had a few of the different 2009's and threw them back. Kept the double thumbs and skeleton finger. It's up to you.
You should be surprised by the fact then that there are over a dozen verieties of that same cent valued the same, or more, than the two you mentioned.