Description
The funniest insurance ad is one that forgets it's an insurance ad, until it doesn't. Mary Aunty opens as a gentle domestic comedy narrated from an animal's point of view: a dog watching its owner go about life with quiet, knowing amusement. The humour is low-key and earned, built on recognition rather than punchlines. And then the reveal lands and the laugh it gets is the kind that comes with a small, warm pang of truth. This is humour doing real strategic work. The target barrier was the industry's hardest: "I don't need insurance currently". Fear-based messaging had failed it for decades. Mary Aunty commercial dissolved it through warmth. The animal narrator was not a creative shortcut but a device that lowered defences, earned trust, and made a responsible choice feel like something worth celebrating. TV GRPs of 459 and 34% above benchmark confirm: humour, when it's honest, converts.




