Stephanie Courtney, who stars as Flo in the Progressive commercials, was also in a hit drama series that won over a dozen ...
In adland, it's been stated so often it's now a truism: America loves Flo, the Progressive insurance pitchwoman played by comedian Stephanie Courtney, and a huge portion of the company's brand equity ...
Progressive Insurance’s latest effort has a passionate customer spreading the word about his favorite insurance company. And, he’s doing more than just telling his friends—he’s taking perky insurance ...
If you haven’t seen a Progressive commercial with Flo, you’re either living under a rock or maybe you just don’t have a television in your home. But Progressive’s spokeswoman has developed a cult ...
— -- In the kingdom of quirky TV advertising icons, Flo, the Progressive Insurance Girl, is a queen. The retro, saccharin-sweet character is credited by the discount insurer with bolstering four ...
Stephanie Courtney (aka Flo from the Progressive commercials) may have once joked to CBS Sunday Morning that in real life she looks like a "sea hag," but based on the rare snaps we've seen of her out ...
Flo from Progressive insurance has joined the big leagues of advertising icons. A Google search for “Flo from Progressive” yields an astonishing 14.4 million hits, including her own Wikipedia page.
Joe Jonas took a break from the pop star lifestyle to try on a new career for Halloween: insurance salesperson. The 33-year-old singer dressed up as the iconic Flo, the fictional Progressive Insurance ...
Milana Vayntrub, the actress behind the popular AT&T commercial character Lily, has opened up about facing online sexual harassment and how she received support from fellow commercial star Stephanie ...
Any cowboy who gets on a bull is taking a risk. So, it’s a nice melding of messages for PBR, the world’s leading bull riding organization, to join forces with a brand that since 1937 has built a ...
The Geico Gecko first appeared in 1999. Progressive’s Flo first appeared in 2008. Neither rivals De Beers’s “Diamonds are Forever” campaign, but still: In advertising dog years, those campaigns seem ...