ITH
IT History Journal
January 22

Jan 22, 1984 — Macintosh Commercial on Super Bowl

January 22, 1984

On January 22, 1984, Super Bowl viewers saw what is arguably the most famous commercial in the history of technology.

The Super Bowl is the championship game of American football. Advertising during the Super Bowl is the most expensive advertising in the world. Not “expensive for tech companies.” Not “expensive for marketers.” Just the most expensive minute of television on the planet. You don’t go there just to “show up.” You go there to make history.

And Apple did.

The commercial was simply called “1984.” It was directed by Ridley Scott, who made Blade Runner and Alien. That alone already hinted that this would not be a typical tech ad.

On the screen, there is a gray, totalitarian world. People dressed identically march into a massive hall and stare at a giant screen where a Big Brother figure delivers an ideological speech. A direct reference to George Orwell’s novel 1984.

here is the image 1

Then, suddenly, a young woman in bright athletic clothes runs into the hall with a hammer in her hands. Guards are chasing her. She swings — and throws the hammer into the screen. The screen explodes.

here is the image 2

A voiceover calmly says:

“On January 24th, Apple Computer will introduce Macintosh.
And you’ll see why 1984 won’t be like ‘1984.’”

And that’s it.

No computer. No specifications. No price. No interface.

Just an idea.

At that moment, viewers didn’t even understand what they just watched. People were guessing:

Was it a social message?
A movie trailer?
A short film?
A political statement?
Was it even an advertisement?

Only at the very end did it become clear — this was about a computer.

The message was quite transparent:

Big Brother was IBM.

And Macintosh was the hammer that would smash the monopoly, the boredom, the grayness, and the soulless nature of corporate computing.

This commercial did several things no one had done before:

It showed that commercials could be made like cinema.

It proved that you could make an ad without showing the product.

It demonstrated that you could sell an idea rather than a device.

It created the trend of “event advertising” at the Super Bowl, where a commercial is discussed long before and long after it airs.

It cemented Apple’s image as a rebel, an innovator, and a challenger of the system — an image the company still leverages today.

After this commercial, technology marketing changed. Computers were no longer sold as “accounting hardware.” They began to be presented as tools of freedom.

Ironically, the commercial aired on television only once — during the Super Bowl. After that, it was discussed by people, newspapers, magazines, and TV shows. The ad itself became news.

From that moment on, Macintosh stopped being just another new computer. It became a symbol.

A symbol that the personal computer is not about corporations. It’s about people.

Macintosh Super Bowl 1984 commercial — https://youtu.be/ErwS24cBZPc?si=cC1bh1COVmmiO8Y6