Some ads do their job and quietly disappear. They run for a few weeks, sell a few things, and nobody thinks about them ever again. Then there are the rare ones, the ones that pop back into your head twenty years later while you are filling in a form at the post office and you cannot quite stop yourself from smiling.
The Butterflow ballpen ad is very much one of those. Launched in 2017, it is short, playful, and so perfectly executed that people have continued sharing it online long after it first appeared on television.
The conceptualisation of this creative idea came from Wunderman Thompson South Asia, the agency that handled the campaign for the Butterflow ballpen. Prashant Issar directed the film and Tubelight Films produced it.
The film ties the gag to the pen and the idea of ultra smooth writing. The visual jokes are quick and the comic pause after each extra name piece is what makes people grin. The ad was made to show off smooth ink in a fun way. The laugh is easy to explain and hard to forget. The idea is simple. The payoff is huge. That mix is a secret of many lasting ads.
Link to the ad:
The story pokes at small memories most people have. Filling forms, writing full names, trying not to make mistakes. That familiar feeling wraps the joke in warmth and stays with you even after the film ends.
So when the clip appeared online again, people were ready to laugh all over. Some watched it for the first time, others felt a warm wave of nostalgia. They sent it to friends, posted it on social media, and laughed at the same silly moment, giving the ad a fresh life and helping the joke travel to a new generation.













