
The sports-centric social media account shared a picture of Andrade at a restaurant and wrote that the Super Bowl streaker had told him that he had placed a $50,000 prop bet that someone would streak during the game. This rumor appears to have originated with an Instagram post from Sideline Daily. There's little evidence to support this claim.

Shortly afterward, a rumor started circulating that the 31-year-old, Yuri Andrade, had a second motive: To win $375,000 on a $50,000 prop bet he had placed before the game: 7, 2021, as the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and the Kansas City Chiefs faced off during Super Bowl LV, a man wearing a pink bathing suit "streaked" across the field in order to promote an adult website. Their images were then duplicated to make it appear as if the whole team was doing likewise.Here are some of the best of the Clydesdale Super Bowl commercials.The Super Bowl streaker did not make a $50,000 wager and did not win $374,000. The first two horses in the team really did bow. The post-9/11 commercial, “Respect,” showed the team bowing with the Manhattan skyline in the background. “They can kick with their back legs, but that action isn’t natural.“Computer-generated imagery was used in another memorable Clydesdale commercial. Horses were trained to make specific moves, first individually, then in groups.“I’d say 95 percent of the stuff you see is real stuff, real horses doing it,” Knapper said.One exception: A puppet hoof was used to kick the football. Jeff Knapper, Anheuser-Busch’s general manager for Clydesdale operations, said a team of Clydesdales trained near Jackson Hole, Wyo., for several months to prepare for the commercial shoot.

So here's a look at the best Clydesdale Super Bowl commercials of past, which date back to the 1986 Super Bowl, when the Clydesdales tromped through the snow while a chorus chirped “when you say Bud you’ve said it all.“The Clydesdales appeared during the 1991, ’92 and ’95 Super Bowls, but it was the 1996 ad that pictured two teams of horses playing football in a snow-covered mountain meadow that set a new standard. Rate the commercials: Become an Ad Meter panelist, help pick the best commercial in this year's big game and be entered for a chance to win a trip to the big game in 2022. Instead, you'll see everyday people picking each other up in some of life's less-than-celebratory moments with the well-worn phrase: "Let's grab a beer." You won't find Clydesdales, puppies or talking frogs in it.

The beer brand said in a news release that instead of paying to air a Super Bowl ad, it will instead be "reallocating the media investment" to raise awareness about the COVID-19 vaccine throughout the year, in partnership with the Ad Council.Īnheuser-Busch will, however, air its first-ever corporate Super Bowl spot, called “Let’s Grab A Beer,” during Sunday's Super Bowl LV, the company announced Wednesday. The move follows Super Bowl mainstays Coke, Hyundai and Pepsi in skipping this year's Super Bowl broadcast amid the financial uncertainty of the COVID-19 pandemic. There have been a lot of memorable stars created by Super Bowl commercials over the years - the tiny Darth Vader, Mean Joe Greene, Danica Patrick, that creepy talking baby - but none with the lasting appeal of a team of enormous draught horses.Unfortunately, the Budweiser Clydesdales are taking another year off from the big game in 2021.īudweiser announced last week that it is foregoing its annual Super Bowl commercial slot for the first time in 37 years, USA TODAY reported.
