Nampak Suami Bersama Perempuan Lain, Wanita Langgar Kereta Suami Hingga Rempuh Pokok











Sumber : Ohbulan




New Jersey Personal Injury Attorney


SAVANNAH, GA — Maybe you enjoyed watching the New York Giants dirty dancing, or hearing Anthony Hopkins fill in for Alexa in his creepiest Hannibal Lecter voice. But if it's sheer, over-the-top madness you like in your Super Bowl commercials, a personal-injury lawyer from Georgia has got you covered.

Jamie Casino, of Savannah, went viral in 2014 when he bought up the full two minutes of local advertising time available during halftime of the Super Bowl and filled it with an extravagant mashup of explosions, flames, jabs at the local police chief and remembrances of his dead brother that came off as part lawyer ad, part heavy-metal video and part action-movie trailer.

On Sunday, he was back — along with the sledgehammer he used to bash stuff in the original.

This year's ad opens with a bank of televisions showing warped versions of traditional personal-injury lawyer TV ads. In a voice-over, Casino, 42, says he started taking personal-injury cases because "I just wanted to speak up for those who couldn't speak for themselves."

"But I couldn't ignore the center-ring show going on in the TV circus," he says, with heavy metal music blaring in the background, before standing and walking toward the televisions, dragging his trademark sledgehammer behind him.

He puts on his shades (indoors, naturally) and, as the background music cranks into high gear, starts crushing television sets with the hammer. There are explosions, billowing smoke, a close-up shot of the cross Casino wears hanging around his neck and lots of quick cuts and shaky-camera work.


"There are a lot of TV injury lawyers," he says as he's shown bashing one last television, with the U.S. flag unfurling in the background. "But there's only one Jamie Casino."

That much is for sure.

Written and directed by Casino himself, the 2014 Super Bowl ad now has more than 5.8 million views on YouTube. While obviously meant to promote his business, the ad also was a way for Casino to honor his brother — Michael Biancosino — who was shot and killed on Labor Day weekend in 2012.

Casino took umbrage with comments Savannah's then-police chief, Willie Lovett, made at the time and, in the 2014 commercial, took multiple jabs at Lovett, who would eventually resign under investigation for sexual harassment.

He parlayed the 2014 ad's viral success into a deal for a reality TV show, "Casino's Law," though, to date, that show has not hit the air.
close
close