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Geico’s Caveman Sets the Record Straight Ahead of the Super Bowl

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Geico paved the way for insurance mascots nearly 30 years ago, and while the brand has gone through quite a few characters over the years—destructive raccoons, talking camels, joyful piglets, gleeful woodchucks and Pinocchio—only two have been in multiple spots and only one had its own sitcom.

Most people think of the Gecko when they think Geico, and the cheeky lizard certainly has earned his spot as a genuine advertising icon, but the Caveman rivals the gecko’s popularity. We just haven’t seen him in a while.

Geico and longtime creative partner The Martin Agency will reintroduce the Caveman in the first of what appears to be a series of spots. The hero two-minute spot is called “The Nightmare” and it’s the first time we’ve seen the character in many years—two decades if we go by what the character says in the spot.

“The Nightmare,” which is the longest ad Geico has ever run on TV, will air on NBC Sunday Night Football Live. The spot features the Caveman waking from a dream in bed with his wife, where Geico’s infamous tagline continues to taunt him. He reads a letter to his wife about Geico asking him to be in a new Geico documentary, and she urges him to set the record straight.

A brief history of the Caveman

Ever since the brand asserted that “Geico’s so easy, a caveman can do it” in 2004, he’s taken offense. Now, years later, viewers get a glimpse into the Caveman’s personal life and find out why he’s returning. 

“Back in 2004, Geico’s Caveman spots broke new ground in comedic advertising by telling the story of the anti-spokesperson. The tone was dry, edgy and sometimes biting. That’s part of why it stuck in people’s memories,” said Neel Williams, group creative director at The Martin Agency.

Williams went on to say that re-introducing an ad icon like the Caveman can’t be taken lightly, which is why the team took advantage of the two-minute opportunity, which was able to show the range of the character: dramatic, poignant, subversive, intimate and relatably human.

“When we dip into our own nostalgia well, we want to do it with purpose, not just because we can. This was a case where the business problem, brief and media opportunity helped lead us to the ultimate execution,” said Williams.

While the Caveman has made some guest appearances on select Geico commercials since his first appearance, this is the first time audiences will see the Caveman as a major supporting character. There was a short-lived sitcom on ABC based on the spokes-Neanderthals in 2007, but it didn’t find an audience like the commercials had.

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