Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Main / RepurposedPopSong

Go To

1->''"Everyone's using old rock songs now. They're not gonna hire a guy like me to write a jingle for tampons when they can just play 'Stuck in the Middle With You'".''
2-->-- '''Charlie''', ''Series/TwoAndAHalfMen''
3
4So there's this song from your youth. Whenever you listen to it, it brings back a whole lot of good memories, and you end up going through the rest of your day with a smile.
5
6What better tune to use to advertise a product?
7
8Advertising is all about appealing to emotion to make a sale, and few things hold more unalloyed positive emotion than a favorite song. It's not surprising that the advertising industry very quickly seized upon the idea of buying the rights to a song and using it in an ad. The basic argument is that the good feelings the viewer has for the song will be transferred at least in part to the product, making a new customer or reinforcing an existing one.
9
10As virtually everyone will tell you, it doesn't always work. But that doesn't keep the agencies from trying again and again.
11
12Apparently this practice "works" often enough in the sense of selling enough of the product to make the practice economically sustainable, no matter how artistically objectionable. Spam email has to work on ''somebody'' too, right?
13
14This practice come in several varieties:
15
16* Played straight. Usually the most expensive option. The agency bought the rights to the specific recording that everyone knows. It's used almost untouched except possibly for a bit of editing to make it fit the length of the commercial, or to get right away to the "good bits" (i.e., the part that has relevance to the commercial's pitch).
17* Cover version. The agency didn't buy (or couldn't afford) the rights to the actual recording, so instead they acquired the right to use the song itself and did their own version. Sometimes it's made as close to the original as possible; sometimes it's wildly different. MoodyTrailerCoverSong applies this logic to trailers.
18* Product-specific lyrics. An extension of the "Cover Version". The song's lyrics are rewritten to extol the virtues of the product. This can have the biggest backlash if potential customers feel the original song is somehow "cheapened" or "ruined", so this treatment is often reserved for older or more obscure music.
19* You will sometimes even encounter [[SuspiciouslySimilarSong altered versions]] of popular songs being used in really low-budget commercials or when they just couldn't afford the song they really wanted. (See that page for examples)
20* These commercials can also have an instrumental or acoustic version of the song while a disembodied voice talks about the product/service/help line/donation.
21
22An agency with an especially low budget (or high concept) might also do any of the above with [[PublicDomainSoundtrack a song from the public domain]], up to and including {{nursery rhyme}}s. This has much the same effect, but with fewer lawyers and a ''lot'' less money involved.
23
24A song can also be ''instantly'' repurposed if an advertiser buys the rights before it's even released. In such cases the commercial use hits the airwaves at the same time as the original song, or sometimes ''before'', and effectively turns it into a CelebrityEndorsement.
25
26Repurposing a pop song can have a BrokenAesop effect if the message of the song is subtler than you'd get by listening to the loudest parts of the lyrics. For example, there is a movement to make Music/BruceSpringsteen's "Born to Run" the official state song of New Jersey, despite the fact that it's about ''how terrible it is to live in New Jersey'' and how much the songwriter ''[[WanderlustSong wanted to leave]]''. (See IsntItIronic.) Seth Stevenson has written [[http://www.slate.com/id/2119668/ two]] [[http://www.slate.com/id/2120229/ articles]] for [[http://www.slate.com/ Slate]] about this.
27
28Contrast with TopTenJingle. Compare MoodyTrailerCoverSong, TheCoverChangesTheMeaning, RewrittenPopVersion, IsntItIronic, RealSongThemeTune.
29----
30!!Examples:
31
32* Ray Parker Jr.'s "Ghostbusters" song was used and changed for 118 118. The line ''Who ya gonna call?'' commonly known to end "Ghostbusters", was edited to finish ''118''. Also in the full-length version of the original advert, a verse, the chorus, and the bridge were all edited, fitting in that it was advertising a directory.
33** The song was also used with rewritten lyrics by Courtesy Dealers, changing the lyrics to "If you need a car/or a truck or van/Who ya gonna call?/Go Courtesy!" Ditto for Appleway Motors, cutting more lyrics and changing the rhythm. Also, if you're from South Florida, Maroone Used Car Dealers. Or Bankston in Dallas. Et cetera.
34** Now that Maroone has become Autonation, Autonation has adopted this song for their ads. They even use it in the ones that say "(car dealer here) is now AutoNation!"
35** A [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YV9lSoKv1qA commercial]] for 3-liter bottles of Coca-Cola products sang this as "Thirstbusters!"
36** Bizarrely, the instrumental was used in a 1985 ad for the "World's Toughest Rodeo" that was preserved on a widely circulated copy of ''[[Ride/DisneyThemeParks Disneyland]]'s 30th Anniversary Celebration''.
37** UsefulNotes/StLouis Creator/{{CBS}} affiliate KMOV 4 (then KMOX) used the song for their news division as "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qRHw0XyyZnk Newsbusters]]".
38** Ditto with [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DU9kjTYynjY this commercial]] for Coat Master paints, a brand of paint in the Philippines which has long since lost to the sands of time.
39* "Anticipation" by Carly Simon, used by Heinz to advertise the thickness and richness of its line of kinds of ketchup in The70s. Played straight, the idea was that, due to its thickness, it poured slowly and was worth the wait.
40** ''Series/SaturdayNightLive'' spoofed this ad in the ParodyCommercial for Swill Mineral Water. Because this water is from the then-horribly polluted Lake Erie, it ''also'' comes thick and "rich" out of the bottle as the Simon song plays!
41** Another Carly Simon example: in the late 1970s-until at least the mid-late 1980s[[note]]And brought back for a little while in the early 1990s for their newscast promos.[[/note]], local El Paso, TX Creator/{{CBS}} affiliate KDBC-TV used "Nobody Does it Better" (from the Franchise/JamesBond movie ''Film/TheSpyWhoLovedMe'') in some of the station's promos.[[note]] Its earliest known use was at the beginning of the station's newscasts. This stopped by the early-mid 1980s or so.[[/note]]
42* "When You Say Love", a country hit by Bob Luman that was covered as a pop hit by Sonny and Cher, was re-written as a Budweiser jingle, "When You Say Bud".
43* "This Will Be" by Natalie Cole, used by eHarmony.com, an online dating service. Played straight, the emphasis is on the next line ("''an everlasting love''," as in "''This will be/an everlasting love''") to convey the idea that dating matches that resulted from using eHarmony would last.
44* "Rub It In" by Billy "Crash" Craddock. A cover version with product-specific lyrics was used by S.C. Johnson & Son for commercials advertising Glade Air Fresheners in the 2000s and early 2010s, more than 30 years after Craddock had made the song popular.
45** A snippet of the song was used with unchanged lyrics in the 1970s(?) for some sort of skin-care product.
46* Kanes Furniture used Bachman-Turner Overdrive's "You Ain't Seen Nothin' Yet", turning the chorus into, "You ain't seen nothin' yet, KANES KANES!!!"
47** Toyota also appropriated the tune as a jingle in the '90s.
48* ''VideoGame/Fallout3'': "I don't want to [[WorldWarIII set the world on fire]]..." (This is a deliberate case of SoundtrackDissonance.)
49** Pretty much happening to lots of other songs repurposed for video games. Especially Rhythm games. Moonlight Shadow remixed in VideoGame/DanceDanceRevolution? Hello MoodWhiplash!
50** Older readers may remember this song being used for a PerfumeCommercial (Chanel No. 5). An early work by director Creator/RidleyScott, you can see it [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dx3Na_7inPI here.]]
51* ''Music/TheBeachBoys'':
52** ''Good Vibrations'':
53*** This song was used for Sunkist orange soda.
54*** Used as the advertising jingle for The Good Guys ("come in and see the / good good good / guuuuuys!") The Good Guys apparently proved, that if you stick with the same product (or in this case, store) specific lyrics for long enough, it will eventually work.
55** "Wouldn't It Be Nice"
56*** Used with programming-specific lyrics in bumpers for TLC's batch of Summer 2010 programming.
57*** The song was used in a series of [[StopMotion claymation]] ads for Cadbury's chocolate, with the lyrics changed to reflect the crazy hijinks that would happen if the world was made of chocolate.
58*** A cover version of 'Wouldn't It Be Nice' was used for the Volkswagen 'Think Blue' ad campaign.
59*** The song is used in a bitterly ironic way in ''Film/RogerAndMe'' to contrast the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flint,_Michigan#Late_20th_century:_Deindustrialization_and_demographic_changes problems that happened to Flint, Michigan]] at the time.
60** "409"
61*** "409" was once used to advertise the cleaning product Formula 409.
62* Music/SherylCrow's "Every Day Is A Winding Road" for the Subaru Impreza and Nissan Silvia.
63* Music/{{Blondie|Band}}'s "One Way Or Another" has been used so many times, for the same illustrative purpose, that now (unless you were introduced to it via ''WesternAnimation/TheRugratsMovie'', ''Series/TheMuppetShow'' or Music/OneDirection) it's almost impossible to hear the song without thinking about somebody trying to open a stubborn bottle lid, crawling around the floor looking for a missing contact lens, trying to get some Doritos out of a vending machine, or the ComedicSociopathy of ''Series/CutthroatKitchen''.
64* Microsoft may as well hold the record for ComicallyMissingThePoint:
65** Music/{{The Rolling Stones|Band}}' "Start Me Up" for Platform/MicrosoftWindows 95. Note the BrokenAesop variant here; the next line to the song, not appearing in the commercial itself, is "You make a grown man cry." Another line not used is "I can't compete", which [[IsntItIronic some snarkier types have found quite amusing]] in light of Microsoft's apparent monopolistic ambitions, coupled with notorious quality control problems (especially in the area of security).
66*** They actually tried to buy R.E.M.'s "It's the End of the World as We Know It" which would have probably been even worse; however the band turned them down.
67*** On the same boat, MS tried to use "21st Century Digital Boy" by Music/BadReligion, which is about overreliance on technology and the negative effect it has.
68** The portion of Mozart's "Requiem" that talks about the souls of the damned.
69** The commercials for the Microsoft Surface use Sara Bareilles' "Brave" -- a song about standing up for yourself -- because of the line "I just wanna see you".
70** Also, a viral ad for Microsoft's Origami platform contained Music/ReginaSpektor's [[Music/SovietKitsch "Us"]], omitting the line "We're living in a den of thieves".
71*** The song appears to be about living in a crumbling, decadent, totalitarian empire. Take your pick whether it's the Soviet Union or Microsoft.
72** One ad for Microsoft Office XP used Red Rider's "Lunatic Fringe". Needless to say, the commercial ends before the lyrics start up...
73* Adverts for Philips electronics and Microsoft have used Music/TheBeatles' "Getting Better" with another BrokenAesop (the next line is "can't get no worse").
74* You want ComicallyMissingThePoint: imagine Bob Dylan's counterculture anthem "The Times They Are A-Changin'" used to promote a ''bank''. The Bank of Montreal thought it worked.
75* In late Spring 2006, Hampton Inns ran a commercial featuring a rewrite of "Wouldn't It Be Loverly" from ''Theatre/MyFairLady''.
76* Bananarama's cover of Shocking Blue's "Venus," repurposed for Gilette's Venus razors.
77* The Orb's "Little Fluffy Clouds" for the New Volkswagen Beetle commercials.
78* Trio's "Da Da Da" for the Volkswagen Golf.
79** A version of "Da Da Da" with rewritten lyrics was also used to advertise Ariston domestic appliances in the UK during the mid-80s.
80* In 2001, progressive rock fans were surprised to recognize a fragment of Music/JethroTull's "Thick as a Brick" used in a Hyundai ad.
81* At some point in the 1960s, [=McDonald's=] applied product-specific lyrics to the old gospel tune "Down By The Riverside": "[=McDonald's=] is your kind of place..."
82** In the 1980s, they used "Mack the Knife" with product-specific lyrics such as "Mac Tonite" to promote longer operating hours. To drive the point home, the commercials featured a character also called "Mac Tonite", a lounge singer with a moon for a head.
83* In 1984, Music/EltonJohn released the single "Sad Songs (Say So Much)" and simultaneously licensed it in a product-specific form to hawk Sasson Jeans by way of the Mondegreen "Sasson (Says So Much)". Worse yet, the video for the song and the commercial were all but identical except for length and that one line.
84* In 1989, Pepsi-Cola paid $5 million to use Madonna's single "Like A Prayer" in a commercial, but the soft drink company chickened out after protests by religious groups in the wake of the song's video release...A video that, for anyone that doesn't know, includes burning crosses, stigmata, and Madonna having sex with what they assumed to be "Black Jesus"[[note]] It was actually a black saint, inspired by St. Martin de Porres[[/note]]. Mmm, Pepsi.
85** Pepsi was big about rock/pop star endorsements in The80s; other songs they used via their original performers and rewritten lyrics included "[[Music/DavidBowie Modern Love,]]" [[Music/MichaelJackson "Billie Jean", and "Bad"]]. Another was set to the tune of Glenn Frey's "[[Series/MiamiVice You Belong to the City]]".
86*** One of Glenn's Pepsi commercials had him with Don Johnson along for the ride. The full version is [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0HByh60JAlc here]]
87*** Then in the nineties, Music/VanHalen's "Right Now" was used in ads for Crystal Pepsi.
88*** On the other hand, Pepsi used Music/TheWho's "My Generation" quite well in one of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wSLtBkFHlwk their more contemporary ads.]]
89* Glad advertised its plastic wrap for a couple of years using Billy Strayhorn's "It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)" rewritten to "It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Cling)".
90** As of 2007, Grolsch beer has licensed "It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)" for use in its ads for a lager sold in ''beugel'' bottles that have a swing-top cap.
91* A non-commercial version of the BrokenAesop effect can be found in the Music/KidzBop [=CDs=]. These take songs that are popular on the radio and re-record them with children doing the lyrics; presumably, because some [[ExecutiveMeddling studio executive]] feared that ''Avril Lavigne'' may have been too hard-edged for children on her own. However, the actual ''content'' of said lyrics is almost entirely unchanged, resulting in songs about sex, drugs, suicide, and misogyny (among other things) being marketed toward kids. [[http://web.archive.org/web/20051030145853/http://www.teevee.net/archive/2004/10/04/index.html Chris Rywalt has pointed this out.]]
92* Music/TheDandyWarhols' song ''Bohemian Like You'' was used for a Pontiac car commercial. The first line makes sense, "You got a great car", but fans of the group were singing the next line, "yeah, what's wrong with it today".
93* For years, Chevrolet used Music/BobSeger's "Like A Rock" for its line of trucks. It later switched to ridiculously {{Eagleland}}-ish commercials with John Mellencamp's "Our Country" (despite Mellencamp's criticism of Seger for "selling out"). And, after years of it seems a natural fit, Chevy has picked up "American Pie" -- or part of the chorus, at least -- for its car ads. Something about that Chevy at the levee...
94** A competing pickup truck ad called GM on the carpet for that. Its ad was a ballad about their truck coming across a broken-down Chevrolet truck and rescuing it. The end of the ballad is "It's some kinda rock, all right."
95* A positively painful BrokenAesop from years ago: "The City of New Orleans", about the death of the railroad industry, being used as a car commercial.
96* "Lust for Life" by [[Music/TheStooges Iggy Pop]] is a rather harsh, cynical song about drug abuse and selling one's soul to the music industry. So naturally, it's been used as a jingle by everything from cruise lines to banks. Do the advertisers even ''listen'' to these songs before using them? Website/TheOnion mocked this with [[http://www.theonion.com/content/node/38780 an article]] where the same song is used in a bank commercial "featur[ing] images of gleaming skyscrapers [and] money changing hands", though the spot is "notably absent [of] any footage of a shirtless, bleeding Music/IggyPop in skintight leopard-print pants, repeatedly bashing himself in the face with a microphone on stage at the legendary New York punk venue CBGB's."
97* According to an {{Urban Legend|s}} that circulated in the mid to late 1980s, the re-election campaign for Ronald Reagan had originally wanted John Cougar Mellencamp's 'Pink Houses' as a campaign theme, apparently unaware of the actual meaning of the song. The response from Mellencamp -- who is known for his radical politics (some versions of the legend even claim he is a [[http://iww.org Wobblie]]) -- was supposedly rather colorful. Regardless of how much or how little truth there is to the UL, it reflects the way advertising campaigns often pick theme songs based on the tone and a few well-known lines without considering the actual ''message'' of the song as a whole. Another legend reputes that Reagan had also considered using Robert Johnson's "Crossroads" -- a song about ''selling your soul to the Devil.''
98* Bruce Springsteen: The Reagan campaign wanted to use Springsteen's "Born in the U.S.A.", despite it having a line that says "Sent me off to [[UsefulNotes/TheVietnamWar a foreign land]] / To go and kill the yellow man". There's an interview with the Boss where he basically says "I don't think the Republicans are actually listening to my music, especially not the ''Nebraska'' album." Hell, 90% of all the songs written by Mellencamp/Springsteen are all about how the Republicans are screwing over the working man. Yet their songs are the ones most likely to be heard at a blue-collar/conservative event.
99* In 2006 Garnier began using "Diamonds and Guns" by Music/TheTransplants, aka the [[SomethingSomethingLeonardBernstein "Woo hoo" song]] that isn't by Music/{{Blur}}, in ads for Fructis hair care products. [[BlatantLies Because a song with the lyrics "Heroin, heroin, it's all gone, Smoked it all up, and now you got none" immediately makes one think "shampoo!"]] But to be honest, the song's AccentOnTheWrongSyllable makes "heroin" sound like "hair on". Not to mention that the main theme of the song is about the selling of blood diamonds, as the title clearly indicates. Did Garnier's ad agency even look at the ''title?''
100* The YMCA and U.S. Navy considered using the Music/VillagePeople's "Y.M.C.A." and "In The Navy", respectively, but caught on to the fact that the songs celebrated homosexuality before they actually started using them.
101** The latter song was actually used in promotional advertising for the United States Navy for a short time -- as part of the deal, the music video was shot on a Navy frigate. The song was dropped from advertising because of protests over using taxpayer money to assist in the production of a then-controversial video.
102** Marshmallow Alpha-Bits [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v_QOVbIy5ng used a product-specific version as their jingle in 2000]], complete with letter-related puns (example: "You can wear your [=PJs=], you can dance to [=CDs=]")
103** The tune was used in the UK to advertise the insurance comparison website Confused.com, with lyrics unrelated to the original song.
104* General Electric's short-lived ad campaign promoting coal usage (with sexy coal miners) used "Sixteen Tons" by Tennessee Ernie Ford, apparently oblivious to the fact that the song is about wage slavery. To the coal-mining industry.
105* Viagra's rework of Elvis Presley's "Viva Las Vegas" into "Viva Viagra". "Viva Las Vegas" means "Long Live Las Vegas". So "Viva Viagra" means "long live Viagra." Doesn't make it any less stupid, mind you, but at least Pfizer knows what it's doing. Not to mention that anyone old enough to remember the release of that particular movie/song is over 50. Pfizer knows their target market.
106* A TurnOfTheMillennium Pontiac ad campaign uses a cover version of Badfinger's "Come and Get It" -- a parody of materialism written for the film ''Film/TheMagicChristian'' -- to sell luxury sports cars. That alone would be bad enough, but in the movie, one of the early scenes has the EccentricMillionaire protagonist presenting to his car company's board of directors the concept for an absurdly huge luxury car. Its reason for being is essentially to show off how wealthy, powerful, and British its owner is.
107* Craig David's "What's Your Flava" -- a booty-call referring to the ladies as candy and ice-cream flavors -- used to sell Popeye's fried chicken, of all things.
108* Music/SeanPaul's "Get Busy", [[StuffyOldSongsAboutTheButtocks a song about ass-shaking]], was once used for a [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JC08iNzazK0 Carl's Jr. milkshake ommercial]].
109* Didijin and Minelli, two Venezuelan jeans companies, used a lot of covers of popular songs for their TV commercials, with lyrics changed to talk about how good their jeans looked.
110* Robert Palmer's "Bad Case of Loving You (Doctor, Doctor)" almost seems like it was made to be used in Dr. Pepper commercials, despite existing for years before they started using it for that purpose.
111* Target went through a period where they used "Hello Goodbye" in its ads (they carefully changed the spelling to put on the screen "Hello Goodbuy") - but only the chorus and the "hey la"s. Any more, and we would ''still'' get hints of what this song is really about: the failure to connect. Target isn't trying to be touchy-feely, but you can only go so far...
112** And then there's Target's use of {{Music/Devo}}'s "Beautiful World" ("it's a beautiful world we live in..."), of course omitting the subsequent lines "...for you" and "it's not for me")
113* The infamous 1988 Nike ads using Music/TheBeatles' "Revolution" got such a big backlash that it's more or less the reason you only hear cover versions of their tunes used for this purpose unless it's advertising something Beatles-related.
114* And there are the "All You Need Is Luvs" ads, which ought to be [[KillItWithFire Killed With Fire]].
115* [[http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=J2UVVxe04pI This]] Ethel Merman's "Vel" commercial
116* Music/{{Buzzcocks}}' "What Do I Get?" was, weirdly enough, used in a Toyota SUV commercial. By reducing the song to its chorus of "what do I get/oh oh, what do I get" (the answer presumably being extra cup holders and plenty of cargo space), it omitted the song's whole unrequited-love theme, not to mention the fatalistic closing lyrics:
117-->What do I get\
118Nothing that's nice\
119What do I get\
120nothing at all at all at all at all at all at all at all\
121'cos I don't get you.
122* Music/CreedenceClearwaterRevival's "Fortunate Son" being used to sell Wrangler jeans. They only used the first two lyrics (about waving the flag, being red white, and blue), ignoring the rest of the song, which is about how politicians got their children out of Vietnam. Intentional in this case; Saul Zaentz (died 2014), who at the time owned most of [=CCR's=] catalog (he sold the company that owns the music in 2004), and whose company still owns Creator/JRRTolkien's movie rights, and was engaged in a feud with CCR singer John Fogerty for some years (he [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fogerty_v._Fantasy once -- unsuccessfully -- sued Fogerty]] for plagiarizing ''himself'', in that his solo songs sounded too much like Creedence tunes), sold the song to Wrangler to anger Fogerty. Wrangler eventually relented and discontinued their use of the song.
123* The NFL advertised the competitive nature of their sport by using Edwin Starr's "War" to promote the league. However, they were careful about it in that they simply repeated the "War" portion of the song while stopping short of the "What is it good for? Absolutely nothing!" portion.
124** It should be noted that ABC and ESPN have used a rewritten version of Hank Williams Jr.'s "All My Rowdy Friends Are Comin' Over Tonight" to advertise Monday Night Football, performed by Bocephus himself.
125* One cell phone commercial has Music/MeatLoaf singing ''Paradise by the Dashboard Light'' with different, cell-phone related, lyrics. This on its own is peculiar, considering the AntiLoveSong nature of the song itself. The fact that he's singing it to his ''[[UnfortunateImplications son]]''...
126** Another Meat Loaf single, "I'd Do Anything for Love (But I Won't Do That)" was used humorously for a Dr. Pepper commercial in which a man does increasingly unmanly things to please his girlfriend as the lyrics play. She tries to take a drink of his Dr. Pepper just as the chorus begins. And he leaves her.
127*** Another commercial has Red M&M singing about doing anything for love-but then it turns out there are a lot of things he won't do...
128*** Meat Loaf himself sang a portion of "Anything for Love" in a commercial for A1 steak sauce in which he starred.
129*** The song was also used during a BigLippedAlligatorMoment in ''WesternAnimation/SausageParty''.
130* The hook for Music/OfMontreal's "Wraith Pinned to the Mist (and Other Games)" ''rewritten'' for an Outback Steakhouse commercial ("Let's get Outback tonight"). Convincingly, too -- it made it sound like their quirky indie hit had always been a commercial jingle. (Incidentally, this probably would be IsntItIronic, except that "Wraith Pinned to the Mist (and Other Games)", like all of Montreal's songs, is [[WordSaladLyrics completely]] [[MindScrew incomprehensible]].
131* In [[https://www.qwantz.com/index.php?comic=1214 this strip]] from ''Webcomic/DinosaurComics'', T-rex opines on product-specific lyrics.
132* In a weird example, Venezuelan folk singer and composer [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simón_Díaz Simón Díaz]] (the old man who composed [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caballo_Viejo Caballo Viejo]]) is openly opposed to the use of his famous songs (not even in covers) in commercials. Instead, he offers to compose and sing songs especially suited for the campaign or the product. Not your typical jingle, I can assure you.
133* If ever there was a song begging to be used in a cell phone commercial, it's the Who's "Goin' Mobile". A 2008 ad for Fox's Seattle affiliate uses it to promote a service that sends you news headlines by text message.
134* In 1968, Jim Morrison vetoed a request from Buick, which the other members of the Doors approved of, to use the song "Light My Fire" in a commercial. In a bit of self-parody over the affray, when Robbie Krieger penned the song "Touch Me" later that year, he ended it with the four-note {{Sting}} from an Ajax commercial popular at the time, and the final lyrics are Ajax's then-slogan, "Stronger Than Dirt".
135* Samsung used the song "Signal in the Sky" by indie rockers The Apples in Stereo in a 2008 ad for one of their phones. This makes the ad painfully hard to take seriously if you know the song, as it was inspired by ''WesternAnimation/ThePowerpuffGirls'', who even appear in a ''WesternAnimation/{{Cartoon Network Groovie|s}}'' which was made at the height of the show's popularity during the TurnOfTheMillennium.
136* Toyota rewrote "Mambo No. 5" to describe all the improvements to the new Corolla. Perhaps the song's even better this way.
137** "Mambo No. 5" was also used as bumper music at the 2000 Democratic National Convention, the same night as then-outgoing President Clinton's speech. "A little bit of Monica..." is probably not what they wanted voters thinking about that fall.
138** Bizarrely, it was also sung by the children's TV character ''WesternAnimation/BobTheBuilder'', obviously with different lyrics.
139*** It was used to advertise Ford motor vehicles in Australia, a few months BEFORE it became a huge hit in Oz.
140** There's a Disney version of the song, which was quite popular on Disney-owned radio stations.
141** And starting in 2013, Party City used repurposed versions of the song for their 2013 ad campaigns, with lyrics changed to talk about what they had for what holiday or special occasion was coming up, and they even did a generic version to promote regular birthday party supplies. It was first used around Saint Patrick's Day.
142** Lou Bega [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ALpgBTGat6E wrote a version of the song]] used for a Creator/KidsWB winter break special.
143* Applebee's once rewrote "Bread and Butter" to feature products it had on special. This was shortly before the chain changed hands...
144** Not to mention that shortly after Robert Palmer's death they used "Bad Case of Loving You (Doctor Doctor)" as "Bad Case of Loving Twos" and "Simply Irresistible" became "Simply Irresisti-bowls".
145** Applebee's also had a commercial with the implied message that eating at Applebee's was patriotic and all-American set to the first few lines of Creedence Clearwater Revival's [[ProtestSong "Fortunate Son"]]: "Some folks are born made to wave the flag, ooh that red, white and blue." They neglected to use the very next line: "But when the band plays 'Hail To The Chief', ooh they point the cannon at you. It ain't me, it ain't me, I ain't no Fortunate Son."
146* An even more hilarious re-writing of "Bread and Butter":
147-->''I like bread and butter,\
148I like toast and jam,\
149I like the pure and simple things,\
150[[LyricalDissonance And that's why I like [=SPAM=]!]]''
151* Music/TomWaits, who was notoriously anti-commercial in his early years, was saddled with a combination of the second and third variety of Repurposed Pop Song when a company completely rewrote the lyrics to his song [[Music/SmallChange "Step Right Up"]] (itself a parody of hucksterish commercialism) to sell their product. Waits refused to endorse the (re-written) song, the product, or consent to the use of the melody. So the company hired a convincing sound-a-like to sing the repurposed lyrics. Waits heard the jingle on the radio and spent some time calling everyone he knew in order to refute he had anything to do with it. All this to sell...Cheetos.
152** A later use of a Waits song (in Levi's ad) was made even more painful because the sound-alike hired was Screamin' Jay Hawkins, one of Waits's biggest influences.
153** He still ''is'' notoriously anti-commercial. He sued both these companies. And '''''WON'''''. That's why you don't mess with Tom motherfuckin' Waits.
154** Though he ''did'' allow Wrestling/AllEliteWrestling head Tony Khan to use his "Ol' 55" in the promotion's memorial video for the recently departed [[Wrestling/LukeHarper Mr. Brodie Lee]], with AEW buying rights to the song so that the video would never have to be re-edited. Then again, that particular use isn't exactly commercial.
155* German internet service provider T-Online has set a huge TV commercial campaign to the tune of the Rolling Stones' "Paint It Black". The commercials highlight the wonderful advantages of having the world at your fingertips via broadband internet. The song highlights a horrible case of severe depression.
156* A long-running Pringles commercial had a repurposed version of "I Want Candy", replacing "Candy" with "Pringles".
157** As of 2015 it's been used by King Games in commercials for ''VideoGame/CandyCrushSaga''.
158* Repurposed Country of 1 & 3 variety: Alan Jackson rewrote "The Mercury Blues" about buying, instead, a Ford Truck. Ironies abound. [[FridgeBrilliance Hey, it's the same parent company getting paid either way...]]
159* GM used Smash Mouth's ''Walkin' on the Sun'' to advertise summer sales on some of their models from 2001 to about 2004/05. Because that song is well known for its relevance to car salesmen.
160** Not to mention that the song is supposedly about Generation X's disillusionment with the hippie movement becoming commercialized.
161* Crystal Light single-serving packets used a rather poor remake of "Shake Your Booty", which instead sang "Shake Your Bottle".
162** And a Pillsbury commercial that changed the lyrics to "Bake Your Cookies".
163*** And diet "supplement" Sensa has used "shake your Sensa."
164* Fall Out Boy's "Sugar, We're Goin Down" was featured in an ad for ''Series/{{NCIS}}'', an ad for the Creator/TimAllen family film ''Film/{{Zoom|AcademyForSuperheroes}}'', and ''nearly'' showed up on Kidz Bop...until Fall Out Boy and their management intervened due to the song's sexual themes. Songs (with no subtle sexual themes this time around) from "Save Rock and Roll" like "The Phoenix" and "My Songs Know What You Did In The Dark (Light 'Em Up)" have been used in many trailers for action-packed shows, movies, and sports promos.
165** In fact, the instrumental for "Centuries", from the album released after SRAR, was used in an Creator/{{ESPN}} promo ''[[EarlyBirdCameo a month before the song was officially released]]''; they proceeded to use it throughout the season to hype up the inaugural [[UsefulNotes/CollegiateAmericanFootball College Football Playoff]], where ESPN would ultimately play the song so much that Fall Out Boy actually apologized for it becoming an annoyance to college football fans.
166* In Australia, Kellogg's Sultana Bran repurposed ''Heard It on the Grapevine'' to ''It's sultanas from the grape vine/That makes Sultana Bran taste so fine!''
167** In the U.S., the original version was used to advertise California Raisins during the 1980s.
168** It was also repurposed for [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V_8mM0wwhuU this]] NoTalkingOrPhonesWarning PSA that tied in with the original release of ''WesternAnimation/MeetTheRobinsons''.
169* Merle Kilgore, who co-wrote the Johnny Cash song "Ring of Fire" with June Carter Cash, was approached in 2004 about selling the song rights to a hemorrhoid-relief company for an ad (they would've used a version performed by him and not by Cash). Rosanne and the other Cash offspring were not amused and blocked the sale (as they hold a veto power through June's co-writer credit).
170* George Harrison's (or, for more casual fans, Music/TheBeatles') "Taxman" was used by H&R Block because it's a virulent anti-tax song. (H&R Block is the biggest tax preparing corporation in America, and it's supposed to help its customers pay less to the IRS.)
171* Kahlúa? Nice stuff, but "Brown Sugar" did not help in selling it, since the song was [[UnfortunateImplications about white slave owners having sex with black slave women]]. Classy.
172** Pepsi used "Brown Sugar" at some point in the 90s as well. In this case, it was sung by a CGI ant (or was it a fly?)
173* A [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rdXiiDAfSPc Starbucks ad]] uses a reworded version of [[Film/RockyIII The Eye of the Tiger]], complete with the band Music/{{Survivor|Band}} performing in the commercial.
174** A commercial for "Cool Quenchers" used the EpicRiff to accompany two boys arm-wrestling for the last Cool Quencher (which is taken by a small girl while they're doing it).
175* In Australia, "Bend Me, Shake Me" by Amen Corner is used to advertise -- of all things -- Bega cheese sticks.
176** Cheesestrings UK adverts changed it to "Bend me, shake me, any way you want me / You got a Cheeststring, you're alright"
177* The Six Flags commercials featuring "Mr. Six" used an instrumental version of "We Like to Party" by the {{Music/Vengaboys}}.
178** Creator/KidsWB had a promo for ''WesternAnimation/TheSylvesterAndTweetyMysteries'' in which Tweety leads the entire Kid's WB lineup in chanting "We like da puddy!" Sylvester finishes it by saying "And ''I'' like the Tweety!" and swallowing Tweety.
179* Hampton Inn has a commercial featuring part of "With a Little Help From My Friends" -- The line "get high with a little help from my friends" is not included.
180** It had previously been repurposed with the same altered lyrics by either Kmart or Target for store-brand children's summer clothing and pool wear. At least they had the "decency" to hack it to bits in order to remove any references to drugs or relationships.
181* Kids from The80s remember the song "Happy Together" less by the Turtles and more by General Mills trying to sell us Golden Grahams.
182** It was also used in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K783SDTBKmg this brilliant ad]] for ''VideoGame/SuperSmashBros''
183** The song was used by a Malaysian chicken meat conglomerate called Ayamas to sell chicken produce.
184** It was also used as a love song between [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XamN-GKLsF4 two star-crossed Twix bars]].
185** Macy's also used it in a June 2015 ad, having it sung by various products in the store.
186** The same year, the song was played at the very beginning of ''WesternAnimation/{{Minions}}''.
187* Velveeta, advertising specifically their "shells and cheese" recipe repurposed The Four Tops' "It's the Same Old Song" into "It's Not the Same Old Side" and even had them appear in the commercial. Their jingles often repurpose other well-known tunes.
188* A cover of "[[Music/DavidBowie Space Oddity]]" performed by Cat Power soundtracks a Lincoln MKZ commercial. You know, the song about an astronaut's suicide?
189** The same company uses Peter Schilling's "Space Oddity" follow-up "Major Tom (Coming Home)" (as performed by Shiny Toy Guns) for a later model of that very same car.
190** While on the subject of Bowie, a Cadillac commercial used [[Music/YoungAmericans "Fame"]] as the background music, without realizing the song is not at all about luxury, but about how being famous is a bit of a drag.
191* "No Milk Today" by Music/HermansHermits has been used for a widely-spread ad for the main dairy company in Norway, Tine Melk. Very funny, actually.
192* The [[UsefulNotes/BarackObama Obama]] campaign used "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JOm-uIPzqpI&feature=related The Rising]]" from Music/BruceSpringsteen's [[Music/TheRising album of the same name]] as a victory/rally commencement song. It's a rather depressing song about a [[http://www.brucespringsteen.net/songs/TheRising.html firefighter]] climbing the doomed Twin Towers and just happens to have an upbeat chorus contrasting increasingly dire verses. Oddly enough, Springsteen endorsed Obama and played the song live a few times for his events.
193** Not to be outdone, the [[UsefulNotes/JohnMcCain McCain]]/[[UsefulNotes/SarahPalin Palin]] campaign got Hank Williams Jr. to re-do his song "Family Tradition" into "[=McCain=]/Palin Tradition".
194*** Before that, John [=McCain=]'s campaign briefly used "Johnny B. Goode", but Chuck Berry made them stop.
195*** The [=McCain=] campaign also attempted to use John Mellencamp's "This Is Our Country" without getting permission and without realizing that not only are the lyrics of the song extremely bitter and sarcastic but that Mellencamp is a Democrat.
196* Skyline Chili aired a long-running radio commercial using a rewritten version of "[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twilight_Time_(song) Twilight Time]]." "It's Skyline time" remained a catchphrase even after the advertisements switched to another song.
197* SeaBond advertises with an upbeat version of "Bye Bye Love", sung gleefully (and painfully out of key) by three older women (and one older man, bearing more than a passing resemblance to Stanley Zbornak from ''Series/TheGoldenGirls'') as "Bye bye paste!"
198* There is a Benylin cough-medicine ad featuring the chorus of the Clash's "Should I Stay Or Should I Go". Its context? Should the woman stay at home, or go to work?
199* ''Series/TheGoodies''` theme song ''Goody Goody Yum Yum'' was used to advertise wine gums, the lyrics altered to ''Goody Goody Yum Gums''.
200* Nena's "99 Red Balloons" (the English-language version of her "99 Luftballons") appeared in a jewelry commercial. Nothing makes one want to buy fake diamonds like the threat of nuclear holocaust.
201** Perhaps an even worse example for that same song: a local radio commercial in the middle Georgia area sets a jingle for a ''steakhouse'' to the tune of "99 Red Balloons".
202** A British local radio station managed to do even worse, by using "99 Red Balloons", with the first verse of lyrics, in trailers for a charity ''balloon release''. Great choice: a song where nuclear Armageddon is accidentally caused by ''releasing balloons''.
203* In another example of completely missing the point, Apple's latest iPhone commercials feature [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lV4k_ngBQSE The Submarines' ''You, Me, and the Bourgeoise''.]] The song is about the emptiness of commercialism and how we should focus more on love and less on stuff. Of course, Apple may be fully aware and just thumbing its nose at us.
204* Music/{{Devo}} re-recorded their own "Whip It" with product-specific lyrics for a Swiffer ad. Member Gerald Casale later expressed regret about having done so, but this was less because of any sense of cheapening the song and more because he found the ad itself "aesthetically offensive".
205** Before Swiffer, though, rewritten versions of "Whip It" were used in at least three other commercials: Gateway, Pringles, and a promo ad on Nickelodeon for ''WesternAnimation/TheFairlyOddParents'' merchandise (with the chorus changed to "Wish it good!")
206* Disney caused controversy by using Music/ThirdEyeBlind's "Semi-Charmed Life" in a trailer for ''WesternAnimation/TheTiggerMovie'', despite not actually using the lyrics about drugs and sex.
207* The trailers for ''Film/{{Flubber}}'' used the song KC And The Sunshine Band's "Get Down Tonight" with the lyrics changed to "'''Goo''' a little dance/make a little '''flub'''/get down tonight".
208* Music/HotChocolate's "You Sexy Thing".
209** This song was used for a shampoo commercial (either Pantene or Garnier commercial) some years ago.
210** This song was used in a Swiffer ad, and once again, "I believe in miracles" was emphasized.
211** This song was used in the commercial for the second National Dog Show (2003).
212* A 1982 [=7Up=] commercial used the last example in basically reworking Music/KimCarnes' version of "Bette Davis Eyes" for the soft drink (which also worked in a ''Pac-Man'' parody)
213* Music/FrankMills' EasyListening hit "Music Box Dancer" has been used in many an ice cream truck ever since it hit the ''Billboard'' charts in the late 1970s.
214* One car company chose to advertise its work with the New Radicals' ''You Get What You Give'', which is predominantly about refusing to surrender (and also states a willingness to kick celebrities' asses...really). How this is related to cars, [[TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons Vecna]] only knows. Let's not forget the line "Every night we crash a Mercedes Benz"...
215** A few years ago Mitsubishi's Australian ad campaign was also based around "You Get What You Give." RefugeInAudacity, or corporate ignorance?
216* Visa Check Card commercials are particular offenders, using Raymond Scott's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V-L5QGllGfU Powerhouse]] to invoke a factory floor, and (horrifyingly) [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZZBm8749I0U using the theme from Brazil]] to remind us of a [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DUzn8tobguk dystopian paperwork-filled nightmare]], apparently. It seems so apt that it's almost impossible to chalk up to coincidence.
217* The [[UsefulNotes/NationalFootballLeague NFL]] briefly used Music/{{Morrissey}}'s "Every Day is Like Sunday" in an advert - a song about how living in a resort town out of season can be so boring you'd welcome an atomic explosion just for a change of pace.
218* Toyota advertised 0% financing with a particularly terrible cover of The Fixx's "Saved by Zero", ignoring the song's "you can't fall from the floor" message.
219* In 1971, Melanie Safka wrote the song "Look What They Done to My Song, Ma", about this very trope and how much it sucks to write a song that means something to you, and then, having someone taking that song and turning it into something completely unrelated. So, obviously, in the 1980s the Quaker Oats Company [[Irony used a version of that song in their commercials for Instant Oatmeal]], with the revised lyrics "Look what they've done to my oatmeal".
220* Little Eva's "The Locomotion" was rewritten for a 1980s UK ad for petrol... the [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aFxL-gkO6fg "Shell promotion"]], obviously.
221** A cover of the song by Music/AtomicKitten was used in commercials for ''WesternAnimation/ThomasAndTheMagicRailroad''.
222* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E7C7RXvWhTY&feature=related This KP Choc Dips ad]] turned "Cool Jerk" into "Do the Dip", complete with mid-60s-style studio.
223** Cool Whip used the very same song in the US, turning it into "Do the Cool Whip"; it's still periodically used to this day.
224** KFC used a lyrically-altered version of the song to advertise Kentucky Nuggets in Malaysia back in the 80s.
225* The 1967 Pete Rodriguez song "I Like It Like That" saw a new life in 1996 when Burger King used a cover version of the said song (retitled as "I Like It") by the one-off Latin music supergroup The Blackout All-Stars,[[labelnote:*]]said cover had been used as the theme music to the 1994 film ''I Like It Like That''[[/labelnote]] playing off the company's longtime slogan, "Have it your way".
226* Speaking of Burger King, a 2000 commercial featured the Music/BackstreetBoys singing a rehashed version of their hit "I Want It That Way" (which ended with Burger King's "Have it your way" slogan).
227** It was also used in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nhJ93iOTF84 this GEICO]] ad.
228* Music/SirMixALot did a jaw-dropping remake of "[[StuffyOldSongsAboutTheButtocks Baby Got Back]]"-- with a ''WesternAnimation/SpongebobSquarepants'' (!!) theme-- for Burger King in early 2009. The long version of the commercial is [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h5X4TSbGreA here.]] This was used to promote kids' meals with toys inspired by the show, and a lot of parents complained, although it only appeared on late-night TV.
229* Home Quarters Warehouse used a (slightly) product-specific reworking of "Rescue Me" by Fontella Bass which worked "HQ to the rescue" into the refrain.
230* A 2004 ad campaign for Coke's short-lived "C2" used Music/{{Queen}}'s ''I Want To Break Free'' as its jingle.
231* A year or two ago, GE used Music/{{Donovan}}'s "Catch the Wind" in a commercial describing their use of wind power -- a bit ironic considering that the singer uses the phrase "I may as well try and catch the wind" to describe how useless his efforts to woo someone are.
232* Sometime in the early [[The90s 1990s]], Domino's Pizza ran ads for their buffalo wings which turned the chorus of "We Will Rock You" into [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m1-GAD_Qs5g "Gotta be, gotta be Domino's (Buffalo Wings)"]].
233** Also used by Cranberry Juice Cocktail: "Crave the Wave!" Always wanted to try them together after that.
234* Music/JamesBrown's "I Got You (I Feel Good)" was used in the early 90s commercials for Senokot (a ''laxative''). One wonders why they didn't use Screamin' Jay Hawkins' "Constipation Blues".
235** The ''Toys/CabbagePatchKids'' Pajama Dance Party dolls [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HMvD-HT2lkY sing this song]].
236* The Discovery Channel's "The World is Just Awesome" ads are built on a Repurposed Traditional Song.
237* Cialis has used a cover version of "Be My Baby" in some of their ads.
238* A commercial for the 2010 Lincoln MKS features a techno cover of ''Burnin' For You'', by Music/BlueOysterCult, performed by Shiny Toy Guns.
239* Modern English's "I Melt With You" in ''any'' commercial involving melted food products. The song itself is about [[IntercourseWithYou making love]] during a nuclear holocaust.
240** One use was especially ironic; it was for a limited-edition Burger King sandwich -- some kind of "cheddar/mushroom melt" thing -- but the band got really upset when they heard that because one of the band members was vegan.
241** Hershey's has been using lite pop covers of in some of their ads (like [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RjSu5g600A0 this one]]) for Hershey Bars, including [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fpP51j74Iyg a jolly Christmasy version]] for the holiday season.
242* Canadian restaurant chain Boston Pizza ran a series of TV ads featuring repurposed versions of [[Film/FerrisBuellersDayOff Yello's "Oh Yeah"]].
243* Chrysler used the (very recognizable) hook from Hum's "Stars", a song about a nervous breakdown.
244** Speaking of Chrysler, for Super Bowl XLV in 2011, the company aired a 2-minute commercial for the Chrysler 200 with the instrumental riff of Music/{{Eminem}}'s "Lose Yourself" in the background. The spot ends with Eminem himself taking the stage at UsefulNotes/{{Detroit}}'s Fox Theatre and saying "This is the Motor City. And this is what we do." Of course, it must be noted that the spot was more about Detroit's (both the city and the US auto industry) comeback from economic catastrophe than it was about the car itself... which may well have appealed to Eminem.
245* Some years back, an ad for feminine products used "There She Goes" by the La's. Nice peppy little tune, superficially sounding in favor of an active woman. Except the next line is "racing through my brain", and the song is purported to be about heroin.
246* In 2006, Kraft got EMF to re-record their hit "Unbelievable" in a series of ads where the lyrics had been changed to be all about... Kraft Cheese Crumbles. ([[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pFjctVBg6K8 seriously]]). This silliness of this was later lampooned on ''Series/TheColbertReport'' with a special report called [[http://www.colbertnation.com/the-colbert-report-videos/73425/august-23-2006/american-pop-culture--it-s-crumbelievable----pop-culture-icons American Pop Culture: It's Crumbelievable]].
247* Not only is this phenomenon not limited to America, but even video game music isn't safe from this trope, as proven by [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OZxSgpfJBmg this commercial (one of four variants)]] which uses the ''VideoGame/BubbleBobble'' theme of all things to advertise for Samyang Ramen. [[http://blog.livedoor.jp/htmk73/archives/552569.html Here's proof that Taito licensed the song]]. At least the song never had lyrics, to begin with.
248** A 1990s ad for Ariston appliances in the UK [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YUVs7vXNZiw used the theme from the Game Boy version of Robocop]].
249* A commercial for Hood (the milk company) once used the song "Scatman" by the late Music/ScatmanJohn.
250* It seems to be a "Perfect Day" to go to a Beaches report for a vacation (the song in question was performed by Hoku for the ''Film/LegallyBlonde'' soundtrack; the song in the commercial is a cover)...
251** The Sandals resort also wants you to come to their "Island in the Sun", as advertised through a cover version of the Weezer song of the same title that sounds almost indistinguishable from the original (besides the replacement of Rivers Cuomo with some studio singer.)
252** Another Sandals ad uses a version of the Music/BlackEyedPeas song "I Gotta Feeling" with lyrics from "[[Film/DirtyDancing (I've Had) The Time of My Life]]". What makes this mashup curious is that the group actually ''did'' do a song that SampledUp the latter ("The Time (Dirty Bit)").
253* Inverted with the use of the song "Move This" in a Revlon commercial. The song first appeared in the commercial, then later became a popular hit for the band Technotronic.
254** Another inversion is "I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing" which appeared in the famous "Hilltop" commercial for Coca-Cola. It became so popular that a second version was recorded (minus the Coke references), and released as a popular single.
255** Two other inversions are Japanese songs by Music/ScatmanJohn: [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pJDubYdQxjY "Su Su Su Super Kirei"]] for a hair care product and [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wR43iwu3G_8 "Pripri Scat"]] for a brand of pudding.
256* The PBS show ''History Detectives'' has the song "Watching the Detectives", a 1977 song by Music/ElvisCostello, which is about...a woman who would rather watch TV (specifically, detective dramas) than make love.
257* In the UK, Canada, and maybe some other countries, a version of Eddy Grant's "Gimme Hope Jo'anna" with new lyrics is used to advertise the yogurt drink Yop. The original song was a protest against apartheid.
258* A German commercial for Buko cream cheese uses the beginning of the Music/VelvetUnderground song "Sunday Morning" together with all the happy family breakfast imagery. While the song possesses a tune that might remind you of a lullaby, the lyrics are rather ominous (''Watch out, the world's behind you/There's always someone behind you/Here it comes/It's nothing at all'').
259** "Sunday Morning" sounds pretty, and its lyrics are the least defiantly offensive on the [=LP=] ''Music/TheVelvetUndergroundAndNico''. But on an [=LP=] notorious for topics including heroin addiction, masochism, brutal street life, obsession resembling ''Film/{{Persona 1966}}'', domestic violence, death and [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking fashion victims]] [''pause for breath''], a cynical song could easily appear benign, in contrast.
260* Mazda's "Zoom Zoom Zoom" (or "Zum Zum Zum") is the first part of a song by Serapis Bey. The song is about capoeira (an Afro-Brazilian martial art form), and at least one part of the lyrics talks about how dangerous capoeira is.
261* The NFL has been using Music/{{Skillet}}'s lead single "Hero" in commercials and bumpers, carefully staying in the instrumental without going through the praying-to-God-for-rescue lyrics. Hilariously, the FOX Network in bumpers advertising NFL games has been using Music/FranzFerdinand's song "The Fallen" which is about Jesus Christ.
262* Music/GreenDay's "Welcome to Paradise" has been played in ads for ''Couples Retreat''. The song's about living on your own for the first time and in a bad neighborhood, not taking a vacation.
263* The current version of the Hess Truck jingle uses the tune of "My Boyfriend's Back" by The Angels for the catchiness factor.
264* "Everybody's Talkin'" by Music/HarryNilsson was [[CoveredUp originally written by Fred Neil]] but became famous as the song from ''Film/MidnightCowboy'' and Nilsson's version is often billed as the theme from ''Film/MidnightCowboy''.
265** Harry Nilsson's "Coconut" was used in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cB4V860YojE the 2005 Coke Lime commercials]] with the chorus mondegreened to, "You put the lime in the Coke, you nut..."
266* A yogurt commercial in the UK featured the song 'I Got Life' from the musical ''Theatre/{{Hair}}''. Unfortunately, the song is about a hippie explaining to his square parents just how much more awesome, cool, and alive his drug-addled self is than they are. Someone seemed to notice this, and the adverts now come with an awkward re-written cover describing the myriad flavours available.
267* In the 1970s, Miss Clairol Hair Color made things very tricky for all productions of the show SOUTH PACIFIC, and they got to the point when Nellie sings "I'm Gonna Wash That Man Right Out Of My Hair" -- because everyone in the audience was thinking, "wait, isn't it 'wash that GRAY right out of my hair'?"
268* The 1992 [[UsefulNotes/BillClinton Clinton]] Presidential campaign used Music/FleetwoodMac's "Don't Stop" (although they listed the title as "Don't Stop Thinking About Tomorrow").
269-->I know you don't believe that it's true
270-->I never meant any harm to you
271* Circuit City used 'Just What I Needed' by Music/TheCars for one ill-fated advertising campaign near the end of their corporate lifespan. The song is about a [[LyricalDissonance one-night stand]].
272* The Music/MotleyCrue song "Kickstart My Heart" (about heroin overdose) was apparently played during the preview of the Pixar film ''WesternAnimation/Cars1'', most likely chosen for the "engine" sound at the start of the song and it's fast tempo. If only those parents knew that Nikki Sixx's heroin overdose convinced them to go to a children's movie...
273** Later on the song was used for a Kia car commercial, with Mötley Crüe themselves appearing.
274* An ad campaign for the Kingsford Charcoal Grill Company with the slogan "Slow down and Grill" features a '''bizarre''' psychedelic cover of Music/TheHumanLeague's "Keep Feeling (Fascination)."
275* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mmv32RHQgDY This]] 2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee commercial might work as a sort of generic tribute to the American work ethic... if you didn't know that the song they're playing in the background Music/JohnnyCash's cover of the American folk tune "God's Gonna Cut You Down". Either somebody's making a subtle jab at capitalism/corporations or the people at Jeep didn't figure that Johnny Cash is popular enough for people to recognize one of his most recent songs.
276* A Mississippi tourism commercial uses a tune that sounds uncannily similar to Eisley's "I Wasn't Prepared", a breakup song.
277* Get-Go was running radio ads for a while with a repurposed cover of Elvis Presley's "In the Ghetto", a song about how harsh life is when you're poor and the futility of trying to escape it.
278* Meijer did a hilarious parody of the lyric substitution in a radio commercial where they "saved money by repurposing an old song". Cue the song being played with periodically the audio completely cutting out and a deadpan voice inserted "Meijer" in place of the word in the lyrics.
279* In its commercial for the 2000 Super Bowl, Mountain Dew [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k1tg2l_yqZY rewrote the "opera" segment of the classic Queen song "Bohemian Rhapsody"]], and even recreated the look of part of Queen's original video as well.
280* In 2010, Rite Aid did a commercial talking about one of their customers who used to be a disco dancer. Instead of using an actual Disco song, or even a SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute, they used two ''[[VideoGame/RatchetAndClank Groovitron]]'' tracks.
281* KIA's infamous commercial using Hamsters and Black Sheep's "The Choice Is Yours".
282* A dating website aimed at married women ran an advertisement that took ''WesternAnimation/SchoolhouseRock'''s "Interjection" and rewrote the lyrics to be about cheating on your husband. The animation was even in Schoolhouse Rock style, with bubble letters writing "Infidelity" when it came up in the song
283* UPS and the song "That's Amore" as "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mRAHa_Po0Kg That's Logistics]]"
284* Inverted with [=McDonald's=] "I'm Lovin' It", which was originally derived from the German-language "Ich Liebe Es." ad campaign. Music/JustinTimberlake was commissioned to perform the jingle in a six-million dollar deal he has since [[OldShame regretted]]. Music/TheNeptunes later developed this further into a song that Timberlake included in the album ''Live from London'' and as a promotional single.
285* "I Can't Believe It's Not Butter" used ''Turn The Beat Around'' in a song and dance but changed the lyrics to be about...margarine.
286* KFC used a rewritten version of Music/TheMonkees' "Daydream Believer" in a commercial that aired in Malaysia in the 90s. The commercial also featured a pair of kids bickering over whether Franchise/{{Batman}} or Franchise/{{Superman}} is superior (KFC secured the merchandising license for the Warner Bros character catalog back then, so they're smug about it).
287* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fc7dbwzPeKA This '70s commercial]] for the Detroit Institute of Arts turned the ''Theatre/DamnYankees'' song "(You Gotta Have) Heart" to - what else? - "You Gotta Have Art".
288* The Clash's version of "Pressure Drop" was used to advertise for the Nissan Rogue. I don't know what [[http://www.elyrics.net/read/c/clash-lyrics/pressure-drop-lyrics.html the lyrics]] are about, but they don't seem to apply to compact [=SUV=]s.
289* In 2010, Macy's controversially used the song [[Theatre/{{Rent}} "Seasons of Love"]] (a song about measuring one's last moments) to sell jewelry. The use of only straight couples (the musical itself had a CastFullOfGay) didn't help matters, either.
290* What's the perfect song to sell margarine? If you answered "Desmond Dekker's ''Israelites''", then [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B9CH1n9tNV0&feature=related you'd be right]]...
291* A truly bizarre one comes from [[UsefulNotes/ModernEgypt Egypt]], where in 2011 [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oSwGDfu0Yps this ad]] came out, using a rewritten version of ''[[Music/LadyGaga "Bad Romance"]]'' to shill...Romero processed cheese. Add that Egypt is kind of a conservative country, and...
292* ''Series/SaturdayNightLive'' did a skit about this: a commercial for an album of classic songs that parents and teens could enjoy together--the parents because they grew up listening to them, the kids because they knew them from commercials. The Beach Boys/Sunkist example above was one of the selections.
293* The Platform/{{Atari 5200}} [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XL1kiD0tRyE commercial for]] ''VideoGame/MarioBros'' repurposed [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yTi0XViw074 the opening theme from]] ''Series/Car54WhereAreYou''.
294* Office Depot famously used BTO's "Takin' Care of Business" in a long-running series of ads.
295* Quite a few local Honda car dealerships have repurposed "La Bamba": "You should be driving a Honda, from [insert name of dealership] Honda..."
296* Marks & Spencer had a disturbing Christmas commercial with a children's choir singing "Falling In Love Again" from the film ''The Blue Angel''. Most people don't realize the full implications of the song. The original song is "what ''Film/BlazingSaddles'' was parodying with "I'm Tired" - a song sung from the perspective of a jaded seductress about how so many men destroy themselves out of a desire for her. (Come to think of it, that sort of song is appropriate for a corporation...)
297* Payless [=ShoeSource=] at one point thought it would be a great idea to shill children's shoes with the song ''Paleontologist'' by Music/TheyMightBeGiants.
298** British shoe company Clarks used [[Music/{{Flood|TheyMightBeGiants}} "Birdhouse In Your Soul"]] by the same group as a StealthPun. [[DontExplainTheJoke The ad in question featured giant kids running around a city]].
299* The Halifax Bank, a British financial institution with a reputation for [[PutAFaceOnTheCompany auditioning its own staff to star in big song-and-dance musical adverts]] (which are generally as naff and dreadful as they sound) exploited Vanilla Ice's ''Ice, Ice Baby'' to shift a savings product known as an ''ISA'' (see what they did there?) Halifax adverts merit a trope all of their own...
300* At the height of the song's popularity, Kohl's used a product-specific cover of [[Music/{{Friday}} Rebecca Black's "Friday"]] to promote their Black Friday sale. Some of the ads do involve a little LampshadeHanging about what an annoying {{Earworm}} it is.
301** Became HilariousInHindsight one Black Friday, when Music/RebeccaBlack herself tweeted, "Today is literally my day lol".
302* "Where Everybody Knows Your Name", best known as the ''Series/{{Cheers}}'' theme song, appears in State Farm insurance ads, minus the line about always being glad you came. Presumably, being glad that people are coming to them with insurance claims after various misfortunes would convey the wrong image.
303** The song is also used in a 2014 Chevrolet Cruze clean diesel car commercial: The ad starts with a man coming into a gas station where they greet him by name as the song plays. Then another man comes in and the song stops. He's got a clean diesel car so he rarely has to buy gas; nobody there knows ''his'' name.
304* One local ABC affiliate used to promote their airings of two episodes of ''Series/FullHouse'' in a row with a version of Madness' "Our House" that changed the chorus to "''Hour'' House" (since it's a half-hour show and all).
305** "Our House" was also used, with new lyrics, in ads for Maxwell House coffee around 2005-2006.
306* In 2011 Honda thought the best way to sell their Honda Civic Si to the young female demographic was with the fun exploits of a masked, super-heroesque girl flying around town in her Si to the tune of MC Chris's “Hoodie Ninja.” Which is about wrapping a sweatshirt around your face and, among other things, peeping on a girl from your homeroom as she undresses in her bedroom. Yeah, that fits the demographic perfectly...
307* Music/TedNugent's "Stranglehold" is now selling VW Jettas. Strange, considering Ted is well-known to be from Detroit/Michigan. Also, there are lyrics, that one wouldn't normally consider family-friendly.
308* Music/BenFolds' "Rockin' the Suburbs" was originally a profanity-laced TakeThat aimed at bad radio rock and [[EmoTeen whiny suburban teenagers]] who like it. In ''WesternAnimation/OverTheHedge'', however, the lyrics instead mocked suburban banality in language suitable for a family film.
309* The ending theme of the first season of ''WesternAnimation/JackieChanAdventures'' [[CreditsPushback (when the station actually played it)]] was a snippet of a Music/{{Wheatus}} song credited as "Jackie Chan's The Man". In truth, the song is nothing more than relevant lyrics written over their earlier song "Punk Ass Bitch". The makers of the program wised on to the CreditsPushback and the other seasons simply used the title music for the credits.
310* Music/VerticalHorizon re-recorded one of their songs from an earlier album, 'Heart in Hand' for the soundtrack for the movie TheNewGuy. The lyrics were much blander for the experience, although the band does mix in some of the new lyrics during live shows.
311* The theme of ''WesternAnimation/TotallySpies'' was Music/{{Moonbaby}}'s "Here We Go," with its lyrics rewritten.
312* An advertisement for ''TabletopGame/{{Monopoly}} Electronic Banking Edition'' features Jessie J's "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qMxX-QOV9tI Price Tag]]" rewritten to go "It's all about the money, money". Yes, the ''exact opposite'' of what the original song says.
313* Played with in a Nortel Networks commercial. Rather than cover "Come Together", the commercial showed a guy reciting it (Minus the line "He shoot Coca-Cola").
314* Happens InUniverse in ''WesternAnimation/KingOfTheHill''. John Redcorn gets hired to perform at a company picnic, but the rest of his hard rock band [[FunWithAcronyms Big Mountain Fudgecake]] refuses to come along. When he's told to adapt, Redcorn takes a song about suicide and rewrites it to be about hygiene: "Wake up in the morning, wanna...wash myself, scrub my wrists, clean my brains out..." He's a big hit with kids and ends up becoming "the Native American Raffi".
315* ''World in Motion'' by Music/NewOrder was repurposed for a Mars chocolate television commercial to celebrate the 2010 World Cup. On the other hand, it was ''originally'' written for the World Cup in 1990.
316* A series of Walgreen's commercials use a lyrics-free version of Music/CreedenceClearwaterRevival's "Down on the Corner" to signify their origin as an innovative corner store.
317** A version of the above song had previously been used for "Pocket Rockers" a music-playing toy made by Fisher-Price.[[note]]It consisted of a music-playing device and cartridges which resemble tiny 8-track cassettes that played various pop songs by famous musical acts of the day. In their original forms. By the artists themselves; and yes, this is the same Fisher-Price that's better known for their preschool toys...[[/note]]
318* "We Are Young" by Music/{{Fun}} was used for a SuperBowlSpecial ad for "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iuvoSw1TiJ8 Chevrolet Sonic]]" (Chevy Sonic). As WebVideo/ToddInTheShadows noted, that ad (along with its usage on ''Series/{{Glee}}'') [[ColbertBump propelled the song to megahit status]].
319** Their song "Carry On" was also used in a late 2016 promo for NBC's ''Series/{{Today}}''.
320* Music/FlorenceAndTheMachine's "Howl" was used in at least one car commercial, and "Dog Days Are Over" in various other places.
321* In 1997, ABC used a re-written version of "Respect" for a ''WesternAnimation/{{Recess}}'' commercial, changing the lyrics to be about the show, and the chorus was changed to "R-E-C-E-S-S".
322* Part of ''Theatre/WestSideStory'''s "I Feel Pretty" was used in a diaper commercial (replacing replacing "gay" with "dry").
323* Music/AliceCooper was in a [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H41MkG23Jww commercial]] for "Staples" as part of his hit "School's Out" was played near the end. He was with his daughter, getting back-to-school supplies:
324--> '''Daughter:''' I thought you said "School's out forever."
325--> '''Alice:''' No, no, no. The song goes, "School's out ''for summer.'' Nice try though.
326* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LZlSK3gAvRA This]] "exclusive cut" of the 2013 M&M's SuperBowlSpecial has Red sing Music/MeatLoaf's "I Would Do Anything for Love (But I Won't Do That)". He's trying to woo Creator/NayaRivera of ''Series/{{Glee}}'' but goes "But I Won't do That!" the moment she licks the back of his head.
327* Speaking of Mr. Loaf, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nSAa9FgTBSg here]] he is with his "signature dish", which he finds goes better with A1 steak sauce. In this altered version, his lyric is "And I would do anything for love and I always do this" (with "this" being accompanied by him pouring the A1 on the meatloaf).
328* Music/StatusQuo rerecorded a song for an Australian supermarket company with lyrics advertising the company. It makes every Australian cry with anger.
329* "Little Boxes" as a theme for how using a certain mobile phone will give you discounts for big chain stores? [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1XyWKakjfUE Why not?]]
330* Arthur Prysock later adapted his 1978 song “Here’s to Good Friends” into a jingle for Löwenbräu beer.
331* In another InUniverse Example, Phoebe from ''Series/{{Friends}}'' reunites with her old singing partner, who had left to write jingles. Later she is horrified to find that her friend had appropriated her signature song "Smelly Cat" and sold it for use in a kitty litter commercial.
332* NBC has used the intro of Music/DeepPurple's "Knocking at Your Back Door" to promote their show ''Shark Hunters''...the problem is that even though that intro sounds like a ''Jaws'' parody, it's ''also'' a song about anal sex.
333* Toyota used the song "Bargain" by Music/TheWho - emphasizing the lines "I call that a bargain / the best I ever had." It's actually a song about how love is better than material possessions.
334* A cover of "Our House" by Crosby Stills & Nash was used as a [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f2sPXmkPlSo jingle for Eckrich sausage]] in the '80s.
335** The Halifax Building Society used the original [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FCYXfmfUN2Q during the '90s]].
336* Janis Joplin's a cappella song "Mercedes Benz," a parody of consumerism, was used in a car commercial to flog... er... Mercedes-Benz. The advertising company responsible did not stop to think about the appropriateness of using a song by a poster girl for Southern Comfort, who if given a Mercedes-Benz to drive would have been so habitually wasted she'd have crashed it. They also did not stop to think that Joplin-savvy listeners watching the advert might have also reflected on the (not-used) third verse, which implores the Lord to buy Janis a night on the town, with all that implies for consequent drunken driving...
337--> Prove that you love me, and buy the next round! Oh Lord, won't you buy me a night on the town...
338* The oddly-named Citroën C4 Cactus car was advertised using [[Music/JeffersonStarship Jefferson Airplane]]'s ''White Rabbit''. A song that extols the virtues of changing your state of perception by doing lots and lots of lovely LSD. Now let's drive a car in this state. Yeah, right. If you don't crash it or provoke a road accident because of all those dope-smoking caterpillars, self-animating chess pieces, red queens with axes, white rabbits, et c, popping up out of holes in the verge, here comes Mr. Policeman who discovers you to be intoxicated on Substances. Your trip now becomes a very bad one to the cells of the local nick. Yeah, right.
339* A series of commercials for Bud Light celebrates various superstitions that sports fans have, featuring the song ''Superstition'' by Music/StevieWonder. Sounds appropriate, right? But listen to the lyrics again--they're about how superstitions are ''bad'' for you.
340* The IMAX film ''The Living Sea'' used several songs by Sting throughout, including the song "Why Should I Cry for You" in three different arrangements. While the song's nautical imagery is suitable for the film, its actual subject matter of its protagonist out at sea, alone on a boat, mourning his father and pondering his own mortality while his demons surround him, isn't.
341--> "All colours bleed to red, asleep on the ocean's bed. Drifting in empty seas, for all my days remaining. But would North be true? Why should I cry for you?"
342* As for examples that completely miss the point of the song at hand, there's a Citroen C3 commercial that features Music/SimplePlan's song "Welcome to My Life" where every material possession of a family gets instantly upgraded according to the catchline "If you want more: change your life. Change your car". The song itself has an upbeat melody, the lyrics, though?
343--> To be hurt, to feel lost, to be left out in the dark.\
344To be kicked when you're down. To feel like you've been pushed around.\
345 To be on the edge of breaking down when no one's there to save you.\
346No, you don't know what it's like. Welcome to my life.
347** Yes, this is the whole chorus. And yes, you can hear it all in the [[http://youtu.be/9LE-J8K8KEk ad itself]].
348* During the 1970s, the then-called Plymouth Arrow (now called Mitsubishi Lancer A70), used the Harry Nilsson song "Me and My Arrow" from ''WesternAnimation/ThePoint''.
349* In 1989, [=McDonald=]'s had a "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yfH3yf-vf3A Menu Song]]" sung to the tune of "Life Is a Rock (But the Radio Rolled Me)". The song listed the items on [=McDonald=]'s menu:
350-->Big Mac [=McDLT=] a Quarter Pounder with some cheese Filet-O-Fish a hamburger a cheeseburger a Happy Meal etc.
351** It was used in a radio commercial for [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tysons_Corner_Center Tysons Corner Center]], a mall in Northern Virginia. This version listed the names of the stores in the mall.
352* British Gas uses an instrumental version of "The Universal" by Music/{{Blur}}.
353* A commercial for Little Friskies cat food modified the 1920s song [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GJzygoRYqj0 Ain't We Got Fun]]
354** It was also modified for use in a 1990 commercial for Royal Caribbean's "Carnival" cruise ship.
355* Parodied by spoof record label [[http://clubbo.com Clubbo Records]]. The soulful BreakupSong "Yeah, Yeah, No, No, No, No" is sullied by a couple of increasingly poor cover versions, the second of which is then adapted for use in a cat food commercial.
356** In another scenario from the same site, the singer of a NewWaveMusic band learns that their song "Drip Drip Drip" was going to be used in a ketchup commercial, and is so pissed that he dresses as a ketchup-covered Jesus in protest.
357* A 2014 commercial for Apple's iPhone 5 uses the song "Ooh La La" by Music/{{Goldfrapp}}. Of course, this is fitting seeing as how the lyrics start with "Dial up my number..."
358* For several years, NASCAR used Music/{{Metallica}}'s "Fuel" as a theme song. A pulse-pounding song about the thrills, and dangers, of street racing, with an addiction subtext. They even forgot to censor a PrecisionFStrike in one of the lyrics.
359* British upmarket department store [[Advertising/JohnLewis John Lewis & Partners]] is now mostly associated with ads (especially those that air around Christmastime) that, [[WhatWereTheySellingAgain in addition to being incomprehensible]], often involve [[SofterAndSlowerCover quiet, brittle cover versions of songs that weren't originally like that at all]] (such as Music/GunsNRoses' "Sweet Child O' Mine", as performed by Music/TakenByTrees), to the extent that [[UsefulNotes/AVeryBritishChristmas any such cover version will now be dismissively referred to as "the John Lewis version"]].
360** Averted in 2018, when the original version of "Your Song" (which had been featured in a previous John Lewis Christmas ad via Ellie Goulding's version) appeared in that year's ad, starring Music/EltonJohn.
361* Kelloggs had an ad around 2011, using kids singing the song "Yummy Yummy Yummy". The song itself is about IntercourseWithYou.
362** A cover of the song was used in an episode of ''WesternAnimation/TimonAndPumbaa'', but with the lyrics changed to be about the duo's TrademarkFavoriteFood of bugs.
363* As of January 2015, a campaign on Youngstown State University's [=YikYak=] calling for the firing of a professor who allegedly sexually harassed students has begun to use the lyrics to the chorus of "Youth of the Nation" by Music/{{POD}} as a sort of rallying cry, which is very fitting. That is unless you listen to the rest of the song and realize it's actually a sad reflective song about teenagers who make poor decisions - including one who [[UnfortunateImplications commits a school shooting]].
364* A pro wrestling example - In the eighties, Hulk Hogan used to enter the ring to Bruce Springsteen's "Born in the USA" - apparently the promoters were unaware the song is meant ironically, not as a paean to American patriotism!
365* The Japanese gum Fit's is more an example of "Repurposed Anime Theme". The commercials use a version of the opening theme to the early 1960s series Ookami Shounen Ken.[[note]]"Ken the Wolf Boy", Toei's first animated series, as well as the first series to be an AnimeFirst.[[/note]]
366* Franchise/{{Kirby}}:
367** The U.S. commercial for VideoGame/KirbyNightmareInDreamland used a parody of Secret Agent Man by Johnny Rivers.
368** The Japanese commercial for the original ''VideoGame/KirbysAdventure'' uses a parody of "Neko Funjatta" ("I Stepped on the Cat"); an example of a "repurposed nursery rhyme".
369* Here's another example from Japan-Music/AKB48 partnered up with Baitoru, a Japanese website that helps people find part-time jobs that pay 1,000 yen [[note]]$8.33 in USD[[/note]] and higher to their workers each day, to produce [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-MEefBdeNwo a version of their hit song "Heavy Rotation" with the lyrics changed to be about Baitoru]].
370* An especially bizarre example from North America happened in 2009 when the song [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Sqh6pcPkDY "Hands"]] from 1970s-era ''Series/SesameStreet'' was used to advertise faucets (!). Granted, it fit [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G_RuXU_1vg8 the context it was used in]], but still...
371** An even weirder example was when "The Song of the Count" was used to underscore [[https://vimeo.com/163293570 this Toyota commercial]] that must be seen to be believed.
372* In 2014, Music/EllieGoulding's cover of Music/EltonJohn's "Your Song" was used in a John Lewis-esque commercial for Kraft peanut butter.
373* The piano riff from Nina Simone's "Sinnerman" in commercials for HTC smartphones (they used the 90s remix).
374* Coke had commercials for the Beijing Olympics using the riff from Sia's "Breathe Me", which is actually about self-harm.
375* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o0X7-ztBiNI This commercial]] for Website/{{Google}} featuring Franchise/TheMuppets and set to Music/{{Queen}} and Music/DavidBowie's "Under Pressure" seems to reference the famous [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6jDHGHL-1nM video]] [[AscendedMeme of the busking puppeteer using two Kermit puppets to lipsync to that same song]].
376* Waitrose in 2014 took a page from John Lewis and made a Christmas advert set to a cover of Music/DollyParton's "Try" (from her ''Blue Smoke'' album the same year).
377* A 2015 ad for laundry detergent "All" was scored by Music/VinceGuaraldi's "Linus and Lucy" as part of a ''ComicStrip/{{Peanuts}}'' homage (ItMakesSenseInContext).
378* A 2015 ad for Philadelphia cream cheese used Dusty Springfield's "Wishin' And Hopin'" with product-specific lyrics.
379* ''WesternAnimation/TeenTitansGo'' has two examples: [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ovSx1Afkoco "We're Rich"]], a parody of the theme song to ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'', and [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gqj0MJDa4Qg "The Pee-Pee Dance"]], which is a repurposed version of Trick Daddy's "Take It To Da House". The latter also played in "Waffles" as background music.
380* Kleenex in Japan had one of the more controversial ones. They had an ad set to [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5u4V3kSEYws "It's A Fine Day"]] by Jane and Barton, that was met with viewer complaints that it sounded like a German curse (though the song is sung in English). Not helping matters was the visual content of the ad: a young woman and a child dressed like a Japanese ogre playing with a box of Kleenex in an eerily lit red room. This was all enough for the ad to play host to several {{urban legend}}s involving the untimely deaths of everyone who worked on it (which proved false).
381* To promote their Halloween costumes in 2013, Canadian thrift store Value Village used an altered cover of Music/{{Macklemore}}'s "Thrift Shop" at the height of that song's popularity.
382** They also did an altered cover of "Y.M.C.A." (We've got costumes! Da da da da da da...) and "Turning Japanese". (I think I'm turning Halloween, I really think so!)
383* A good deal of the promotion for ''WesternAnimation/InsideOut'' used the song "More Than a Feeling" by Music/{{Boston}}, introducing new audiences to the decades-old song. Ditto for Music/{{Aerosmith}}'s "Sweet Emotion".
384** Speaking of ''Inside Out'', the ''WebAnimation/HowItShouldHaveEnded'' video about that movie closes on a short parody of "Don't You Forget About Me" (the theme song to ''Film/TheBreakfastClub'') with the lyrics changed to be about Bing Bong, which might have caused some younger generations to associate the (actual) song with him.
385*** The actual song itself was used in [[https://www.ispot.tv/ad/w_Th/state-farm-dont-you-featuring-willis-earl-beal this State Farm ad]], as well as [[https://www.ispot.tv/ad/A5pA/at-and-t-unlimited-data-stream-it-all-featuring-anthony-michael-hall this AT&T ad]] and [[https://www.ispot.tv/ad/AaXX/walmart-holiday-shopping-the-moment-song-by-simple-minds this Walmart commercial]].
386* Music/ArethaFranklin's "Who's Zoomin' Who" seems to be tailor-made to be used in commercials for cameras with zoom functions. And indeed, it was - it appeared in a 1989 ad for Sharp, whose video cameras had improved their zooming.
387* "Everybody Hurts" by Music/{{REM}} was featured in a PIF for the NSPCC, which played out like a Cinderella parody - [[TheHeroDies except the Cinderella dies in a fire while her family is out on the town]].
388* Music/TheWallflowers' "One Headlight" was used in a 2014 Geico commercial.
389* Two similar campaigns for electronic devices ran 15 years apart. The iMac in 2000 ran four commercials, each advertising their ruby, indigo, sage, and snow computers with Dion and the Belmonts' "Ruby", Music/ElvisPresley's "Blue Suede Shoes", Franchise/TheMuppets' "Bein' Green" and Music/{{Cream}}'s "White Room" respectively. During the 2015 Christmas season, Website/{{Google}} advertised their Nexus phone with a commercial set to Darlene Love's version of "Marshmallow World". Both campaigns had similar visuals and an emphasis on older music making for a HilariousInHindsight moment.
390* Parodied by Music/MitchBenn, on a 2005 ''Radio/TheNowShow'' segment about Music/BobDylan's deal for ''Music/LiveAtTheGaslight1962'' to be sold exclusively in Starbucks for 18 months, and the outcry that he was selling out. Mitch said "It's not like he's actually doing Starbucks adverts. Well, it's a ''little'' bit like that", leading into "The Beans They Are A-Grinding".
391* Music/IrvingBerlin repurposed his own song "Any Yams Today" for the war effort during UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, creating the classic "WesternAnimation/AnyBondsToday".
392* A fictional example. Greg from ''WesternAnimation/StevenUniverse'' became a multi-millionaire due to his ex-manager from the 80s repurposing one of his songs into a burger jingle.
393* Carmen [=McRae=]'s cover of "Just A Little Lovin'" was used in [[https://youtu.be/qH3tqvnU9z0 a Sleepy's commercial]] that aired during the 2011 Super Bowl.
394* Atlanta superstation Peachtree TV has aired a commercial that sets "Married Life", the main theme from ''WesternAnimation/{{Up}}'', [[MundaneMadeAwesome to the life cycle of a package of strawberries.]]
395* In 2009, ''Franchise/{{Barbie}}'' commercials used the chorus from Music/{{Aqua}}'s "Barbie Girl" as background music (albeit replacing the "you can brush my hair/undress me everywhere" lyrics with "You can be a star, don't matter who you are"),[[http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/08/26/years-later-mattel-embraces-barbie-girl/?_r=1 bringing the memetic hit full circle.]]
396* The [=DiVinyls=]' "I Touch Myself", a song about masturbation, was repurposed as a song to raise up breast cancer awareness following lead singer Chrissy Amphlett's death in 2013, with various artists such as Olivia Newton-John covering it.
397* "Take on Me" (and its music video) were repurposed in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?list=PL0sthboRhU6Gw7n0BI4u7gqYIp_UlxL2D&v=Al_hYLO_YIQ this]] ReferenceOverdosed promo video for the Toronto Film Festival.
398* The late Southern California car dealer Cal Worthington had a very well-known jingle (with varying lyrics) set to the tune of "If You're Happy and You Know It".
399* The infamous "Trololo" song[[note]]Originally called (loosely) "I'm Very Glad Because I'm Finally Coming Home", and also known as "Vocalise" (pronounced "Voca-LEASE").[[/note]] was used for [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PT3cnBtcuZg an Israeli bank commercial]] as a pun on "lo", the Hebrew word for "no". It even ends with a female teller telling a male customer "ken" ("yes").
400* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zv5OIvwqkvM This ad]] for ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaALinkToThePast'' is to the tune of Game Boys by Scha Dara Parr.
401* Andrew Belle's "Sky's Still Blue" had to be rewritten for a Windows commercial because the original lyrics were too dark. The revised single ended up being more popular than the original.
402* A UK advertising campaign for Pampers disposable nappies featured women going into labour, going through labour, and holding their babies afterwards, set to the chorus of "Push It" by Salt 'n' Pepa, giving the song a completely different meaning without changing a thing.
403** In the States, the song was used in a Advertising/{{Geico}} commercial where [[AdamWesting Salt 'n' Pepa themselves told people to push things because "it's what they do."]]
404* From 1984 to 1987, the premium cable network Creator/{{Showtime}} used variants on Music/ThePointerSisters' "I'm So Excited" as part of their ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jb7gAZ-4l1k Showtime Excitement]]'' campaign; variants of the tune were used in intros from movies and specials in addition to promos and bumpers.
405* Music/TheBeatles song "Music/{{Help}}" was once used in an ad campaign by the electronics chain H.H. Gregg to advertise themselves as the chain that is able to help with any issues one might have on buying and using electronics.
406** Website/{{Google}} also once used the song for a commercial for their signature search engine.
407* Speaking of Google, another commercial of theirs used the Music/DarylHallAndJohnOates song "Maneater".
408* The song "New Soul" by Yael Naïm was used by Apple to promote their Macbook Air laptop. The commercial was so popular it propelled her song to be her only hit in the U.S.
409* While arguably most of the "product-specific lyrics" versions of this trope are with classic rock or older pop songs, the Southern US discount furniture chain Rooms To Go has jumped on board with a version of the Music/TheBlackEyedPeas song "My Humps" rewritten to be about storage containers (sample lyric: "Whatcha gonna do with all that stuff/All that stuff, that's quite enough!"). This commercial has seen a lot of airplay on Southern NBC affiliates in the latter part of TheNew10s with a song that is barely a decade old.
410* The UK frozen fish company Young's not only rewrote Music/{{Slade}}'s "Far, Far Away" to be about fish 'n' chips, they [[https://ok.ru/video/5331617180 got Noddy Holder to perform it]].
411* The Christmas song "The Most Wonderful Time Of The Year" was used (without the most Christmas-specific lyrics) for a back-to-school ad by Staples in the US in 1996, for a summer food ad by the UK supermarket chain Co-Op in 2013, and with altered lyrics in a {{memetic|Mutation}} ad for cranberry-flavored Sprite in 2018.
412* The song "Don't Worry, Be Happy" by Music/BobbyMcFerrin'' has been used in commercials for [=CareSource=] health insurance.
413** And his "Thinkin' About Your Body" was reworked to advertise Cadbury's chocolate in the UK, with the lines "Thinkin' about your body / Thinkin' about your face" changed to "Thinkin' about your choc'late / Thinkin' about your taste".
414* Fans of Music/{{Prince}} were not happy to hear that Capital One used his song "Let's Go Crazy" to [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MR9uqLRUN3A advertise their new Savor Card]].
415* In 1987, Freddy Cannon sang a reworked version of his 1962 hit "Palisades Park" that was used to advertise Kennywood Park, the lyrics being altered to mention various rides that were active at the time.
416* In the eighties, UK hamburger chain Wimpy's had an advert with "Come On Over to My Place" by Music/TheDrifters reworked as "Come on over to my place/Hey you, we're having a Wimpy,/We'll be grilling, shaking and filling,/Won't you come on over tonight?"
417* [[ZigZaggedTrope Zig-zagged example]]. Country group Music/{{Alabama}} recorded a song titled "[[https://youtu.be/foa6K-z3qtw The Fans]]" as a tribute to their fans on their 1986 [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Greatest]] [[GreatestHitsAlbum Hits]] compilation album. The song was then revised slightly as "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R0-HMsLF2ns Richard Petty Fans]]" as a tribute to the man known in UsefulNotes/{{NASCAR}} circles as "The King" as Petty prepared to retire after the 1992 NASCAR Winston Cup season, with the song playing as he [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fwzcO9qACyM drove through the track one final time]] at the end of the season-ending Hooters 500 race in UsefulNotes/{{Atlanta}}. The following season, the original version of "The Fans" was used prior to the start of the 1993 [=DieHard=] 500 following [[TearJerker the death of Davey Allison]] in a helicopter crash in July 1993[[note]]the second driver killed in an aviation accident in three months; as defending champion Alan Kulwicki - who narrowly clinched the 1992 championship in that same Hooters 500 race - was killed when the chartered Hooters plane he was on crashed that April[[/note]]; which was the first race the #28 Robert Yates Racing Texaco-Havoline Ford Thunderbird which had been driven by Allison was entered in since Allison's death, with the song playing [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-LRqYBpyi1g in the background]] as Allison's uncle Donnie drove the #28 car around the track before the race began.
418* Creator/CirqueDuSoleil's ''Crystal'', instead of original vocal songs in "Cirquish", features covers of Music/NinaSimone's "Sinnerman", Music/{{Sia}}'s "Chandelier", Music/{{Beyonce}}'s "Halo", and Music/{{U2}}'s "Beautiful Day".
419* State Farm runs some radio ads touting the quality of their coverage and then augments it with "covers" of snippets from 90s songs by soundalikes. The lyrics are replaced with references to car insurance.
420* ''Series/TheAddamsFamily'' is an example of a "repurposed TV theme song". In the early 1990s, the now-defunct [=HomeClub=] Warehouse chain used a version of the theme for its commercials.
421** At least one other commercial has used this theme, also in the 90s; a commercial for Nestlé Buncha Crunch.
422* Many unlicensed toys made in China tend to use obscure pop songs as sound chips:
423** The most notable one is Butterfly by [[Music/SmileDK Smile.dk]], which is [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cqDFg1PsNb8 often used]] for toy cellphones. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1JBZCxrPFlU It was even used for an official toy]] for the Korean release of ''Anime/SuitePrettyCure''.
424** "Kiss Kiss" by the Vengaboys is another common soundchip in unlicensed toys. Some toys feature a variant with altered lyrics about dancing at night.
425** Three Aqua songs have been used for this purpose: [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hTFYoGkgfdY "Lollipop (Candyman)"]], "Barbie Girl" and [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=abks3-9K8W0 "Around The World"]], with the latter being used for official American sports team dinosaur toys.
426** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yl_tdjKKUi8 "My World" by Sophie]] (no, not [[Music/{{Sophie}} that Sophie]]) seems to be used in a good number of unlicensed toys.
427** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uil3fE798nA Crazy Frog's Axel F]] is a common choice for light-up tops.
428** Some of these toys play {{Music/Toy-Box}}'s "Tarzan and Jane".
429* A 2020 Dunkin' commercial made use of the Powfu song "Death Bed" (also known by its subtitle "Coffee for your Head") to advertise their services during the COVID-19 pandemic, though based on the song's main title, [[ComicallyMissingthePoint it was clear it meant anything other than coffee.]]
430* Temptations Cat Treats [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=leV-FnfUIrg ran an advert in the UK in 2015]] featuring "Demolición" by Peruvian band Los Saicos. The song is in Spanish and is about tearing down a train station, while the cats in the ad are tearing apart bags of Temptations.
431* UK confectionary Trio (consisting of a candy bar that is a chocolate-covered biscuit with toffee fillings) had its mascot Suzy sing about wanting Trios to the tune of "Day-O (The Banana Boat Song)".
432-->'''Suzy''': Trio, Trio, I want a Trio and I want one now!\
433Not one, not two but three things in it! Chocolate, a biscuit, and a toffee taste, too!
434* The Cockney Rebel song "Mr. Soft" was used with modified lyrics in commercials for Trebor Softmints and Softfruits, which featured a sentient humanoid plush doll sharing his name with the song as a mascot.
435* There was [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gtM11Gb_7Bs an advert]] for Hellmann's Dijonnaise in 1993 that was accompanied by a jingle sung to the tune of Gene Chandler's hit "Duke of Earl".
436* In 1999 Walmart used songs from old TV series with altered lyrics in their Rollback campaign, including [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K-KgGRC_efQ Rawhide]] (Rollin', rollin', rollin', keep those prices rollin', Rollback) and [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=70MdKcIfwow Secret Agent Man]] (He's the Rollback Man).
437* Creator/EricIdle rewrote his own "Galaxy Song" from ''Film/MontyPythonsTheMeaningOfLife'' for [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3NCYTDulAyM a trailer]] to Professor Brian Cox's nature show ''Wonders of Life'', moving the focus from the immensity of the universe around us to the complexity of the system that brought us here.
438-->You've a tiny little blink of life to try to understand,\
439What on Earth is really going on,\
440In biology and chemistry,\
441Which made you you, and made me me,\
442But don't ask me, I only wrote the song!
443* The UK sunflower spread Vitalite had a series of ads with the sun and sunflowers singing about it to the tune of Music/DesmondDekker's "Israelites".
444* The defunct UK supermarket William Low had an ad that reworked "Down and Out" from ''Film/BugsyMalone'' to be about how they kept their prices down.
445* Most people in the UK probably think Music/PerezPrado's "Guaglione" and Music/{{Leftfield}}'s "Phat Planet" are just songs Guinness uses to sell stuff.
446* Creator/{{ABC}} adopted Music/TheCarpenters' "Let Me Be the One" as "Let Us Be the One" for the 1976-77 television season, and that pattern was repeated again in 1977 and 1978 using Music/{{Orleans}}' "Still the One" and Music/TheOakRidgeBoys' "You're the One,"[[note]]As "We're the One"[[/note]] respectively.
447* Music/AlanPrice's "Poor People" from ''Film/OLuckyMan'' was reworked as "News People in Touch with People" by San Diego-based jingle company Tuesday Productions.
448* There were some UsefulNotes/McDonalds commercials in the early 1990s where the Advertising/McDonaldland characters sang a version of "Do You Believe in Magic" by Music/TheLovinSpoonful.
449* OlderThanTelevision, believe it or not. Fred Waring and His Pennsylvanians had a hit song in 1932 that went "let's have another cup of coffee, let's have another piece of pie" and in the late 40s Nescafe began using "let's have another cup of coffee, let's have a cup of Nescafe", doubling as CoveredUp for a generation of baby boomers who know the commercial better than the song.
450* A trailer for ''WesternAnimation/TurningRed'' uses Music/{{NSYNC}}'s "It's Gonna Be Me" with a line edited from "You might been hurt, babe" to "You might been hurt, Mei".
451* "Billericay Dickie" is a naughty song by [[Music/IanDuryAndTheBlockheads Ian Dury]] about a despicable man (as told by the author himself on numberous occasions) and his "sexual relations" with women, what usually nowadays known as rape. So naturally you take the lyrics out, replace them with new ones in the same cadence, and you get one of the most iconic and long-running (1988-2010) series of Australian commercials for [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vAV3ZmQuEeY Ajax Spray & Wipe]] starring Paula Duncan, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7yCiKWv-9HE every]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wrkp0nHrsYI single]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fgSx5TxxF6I one]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0mBqde_ElqE of]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vsQbMexoU_E them]] with a variation of "Billericay Dickie" as their main theme.
452* Cadbury did an ad for their Caramello Koala candy bars where the mascot sang a jingle spoofing the Music/{{Donovan}} song "Mellow Yellow".
453* Australia's Creator/SevenNetwork TV channel used a reworded version of "Mony Mony" for their 1992 [[https://youtu.be/HTWvz2Gbuuc "Yeah!"]] network promo.
454* An in-universe example in the ''Series/EerieIndiana'' episode "Zombies in [=PJs=]", when the World o' Stuff store's SubliminalSeduction leads to Marshall dreaming about Music/TheSupremes lookalikes singing a jingle to the tune of "Stop! In the Name of Love":
455-->Shop! At the World o' Stuff,\
456Because you need the stuff.\
457Shop! At the World o' Stuff,\
458You just can't get enough.\
459Don't think it over...
460* The official trailer for ''WesternAnimation/MinionsTheRiseOfGru'' used "Lose Yourself" by Eminem for some reason.

Top