$4,444.44 per frame.
Working with that number, sell frames for $5,000 each as in group buy. A website will already be in place to take the orders, all payable via Bitcoin only, and use the same site to showcase each and every frame on a dedicated page. Sure, the ad will suck overall, but imagine the press it will receive, whereupon the website will get mega traffic.
Producing the ad would be at a minimum. The website would have to be topnotch, easy to load and navigate.
I believe there's enough average Joes with a little depth in their pocketbooks that would be wiling to dole out five grand to have their liking on a Super Bowl commercial placed somewhere between a BitPay screenshot and a bottle of Coke/Pepsi. Hell, since the ad will look like shit anyways, those that order would have the option of picking what frame number they want if it's still available.
I'm sure BFL would dole out $5K for such an ad, as well as Satoshi Dice, along with a handful of Bitcoin millionaires for prosperity reasons.
The 5K figure is based on 30 frames per second.
Can anybody provide a link to a video that depicts 30 fps of random images?
Actually Phinnaeus, you've made me realize there's another entirely different option for a super bowl ad. Remember when the Miller Highlife aired a 1 second commercial that simply consisted of their spokesperson saying "Highlife?" This was the actual ad:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f83AYIJiQUwAnd then they capitalized on that novelty by airing prior ads, advertising the fact that they only needed a 1 second ad:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qYW31meznQc
Bitcoin could do a simple, intriguing, and very short ad that consisted of a brief message and an easy to remember web address. The website could be any number of things from an easy intro video to a small BTC faucet of sorts.
The TV spot could show the climbing value of BTC over the past few months and pose an interesting question like: "What makes bitcoin so valuable? Find out for yourself at www.[relevantaddress].com