1978 Orson Welles Cadillac Ad

This old Cadillac ad featuring Orson Welles is absurdly brilliant. It sells comfort by exaggerating size and personality—then backs it with visual proof that makes your eyes stick exactly where the brand wants.
Marketing analysis
The eye-tracking heatmap shows how perfectly this ad directs attention: first to Welles’ face (credibility), then to the car (product), and finally to the headline (message). Even without reading the copy, the viewer “gets it”—big guy, big luxury, big car.
Why it works
- Uses celebrity authority to transfer trust
- Humor humanizes the luxury pitch
- Big visual contrast (tiny car ad trope flipped)
- Clear visual flow from face to product to logo
- Emotionally anchored—comfort and confidence
Examples
- Old Spice’s “The Man Your Man Could Smell Like” ad used humor plus male exaggeration.
- Dos Equis’ “Most Interesting Man” leaned on authority and charm.
- Weight Watchers’ Oprah ads rely on celebrity credibility and relatability.





