Notebookcheck Logo

Intel's new anti-Mac adverts are hilarious - but for all the wrong reasons

Justin Long has headed ad campaigns for both Intel and Apple. (Image source: Dell/Intel/Apple - edited)
Justin Long has headed ad campaigns for both Intel and Apple. (Image source: Dell/Intel/Apple - edited)
The five new “Justin Gets Real” videos from Intel will likely make you laugh, but it seems unlikely that’s what Team Blue was gunning for when the company managed to snatch up "Get a Mac" veteran Justin Long to head its new anti-Mac “Go PC” ad campaign.
Views, thoughts, and opinions expressed in the text belong solely to the author.

The word “desperate” has already been used in many headlines in regard to Intel’s new ad campaign starring former Mac herald Justin Long. While it would be straightforward enough to criticize Intel for its over-simplification of what users look for when choosing between a laptop PC and Apple MacBook, such a thorough dissection could mean you miss out on the simple hilarity value of each video.

Intel's Justin is trying to ignore the voice of reason from Apple Mac's Justin. (Image source: Dell/Intel/Apple - edited)
Intel's Justin is trying to ignore the voice of reason from Apple Mac's Justin. (Image source: Dell/Intel/Apple - edited)

First we have Justin, who is no longer “a Mac” and now appears to be “computer illiterate”, reminding us that “one’s better than none” when an Intel-powered Dell XPS 13 triumphs over the puny M1 MacBook by driving three external monitors and not just one. Very handy for those who find two external monitors is never enough.


The second video has Justin being bowled over by the cutting-edge technology of a touchscreen – because clearly he has never owned a smartphone or tablet before. While the Asus ZenBook Duo 14 is certainly an innovative laptop, poor old Justin is once again expected to play a clueless user who doesn’t know that mutton is meat from a sheep.


By the third video, Intel has to implement some crafty CGI to keep the anti-Mac campaign ticking over. As Justin lovingly unlocks the Asus ZenBook Duo with his face (“whoa” and “wow” indeed), the secondary display magically superimposes itself over the actor’s thumbs. Along with that technical wizardry, Intel’s argument is now also reduced to “why enjoy superior Apple M1 performance when you can have a less gray machine”.


An Intel-powered laptop can give Justin intangible thumbs - the MacBook can't do that. (Image source: YouTube/Intel)
An Intel-powered laptop can give Justin intangible thumbs - the MacBook can't do that. (Image source: YouTube/Intel)

When it comes to the fourth video, Justin has help on hand from “PC gamer” who is enjoying a gaming session on his MSI Gaming Stealth 15M laptop. Intel jokes about the non-presence of the Mac gamer while hoping everyone forgets that the M1 Apple MacBook Pro managed higher average FPS rates in some games than an Acer Swift 5 with i7-1185G7 – and that was in Intel’s own benchmarks.


The last video in the current run compares a MacBook with the Lenovo Yoga 9i, which is clearly superior because it’s also a tablet and this is what Intel believes is what all laptop owners want. Poor old Justin is then lumbered with an iPad tablet, keypad, and dongle – because apparently you can’t really use a MacBook without an additional keypad on hand.


After viewing, it’s plain to see why so many commenters are going with the word “desperate” to describe Intel's ad strategy here, although Justin does do an admirable job of portraying a hapless simpleton who likely pictures a male sheep when someone mentions RAM. The tone used by Team Blue here is too cartoonish – you almost expect Justin Long to slip on an apple while walking over to the MacBook or receive a digital pie in the face when trying to use iOS.

Unsurprisingly, the campaign appears to have misfired so far, with the videos already amassing more dislikes than likes on YouTube. Intel should be focusing more on producing consumer and prosumer market-attractive processors and less on taking cheap and unwittingly hilarious digs at a competitor that has already impressed with its first-generation silicon output. But it seems the best Team Blue can do right now is hope viewers will copy Justin by going into electronics stores and opining “Oh, and there’s Intel, nice”.

Because nice is better than not nice. (Image source: YouTube/Intel)
Because nice is better than not nice. (Image source: YouTube/Intel)

Source(s)

Intel (YouTube channel)

Read all 17 comments / answer
static version load dynamic
Loading Comments
Comment on this article
Opinion by Daniel R Deakin
Views, thoughts, and opinions expressed in the text belong solely to the author.
Please share our article, every link counts!
> Expert Reviews and News on Laptops, Smartphones and Tech Innovations > News > News Archive > Newsarchive 2021 03 > Intel's new anti-Mac adverts are hilarious - but for all the wrong reasons
Daniel R Deakin, 2021-03-21 (Update: 2021-03-21)