Remembering The ‘1984′ Super Bowl Mac Ad
Caroline McCarthy: The fact that the Los Angeles Raiders humiliated the Washington Redskins in a 38-to-9 victory is a mere afterthought. Super Bowl XVIII’s lasting legacy has been a single advertisement sandwiched somewhere in the third quarter: Apple Computer’s iconic “1984″ commercial.
It began, in a clear nod to George Orwell’s novel of the same name, with tense strains of music, the image of figures marching through a tube across a dank industrial complex, and the start of a bizarre monologue: “Today we celebrate the first glorious anniversary of the Information Purification Directives.”
Directed by Ridley Scott not long after Blade Runner, “1984″ aired on January 22, 1984, and its narrative is now geek canon. Scores of blank-faced people are fixated on a broadcast of a Big Brother figure on a giant television screen, until a woman in bright athletic apparel sprints down a center aisle, wielding a hammer. She hurls it at the screen, which explodes into a bright white light…














