Here is the original commercial:

I will leave it here for the moment - but will update soon

Update

It is well known that people tune in to watch the Super Bowl for the commercials that air during the game and the half-time extravaganza just as much as for the football game itself. Many even consider the Super Bowl to be one giant commercial.

It is estimated that a 30 second advertisement spot during the Super Bowl costs upwards of $4 million. This is due to the fact that the Super Bowl is consistently the most watched television event of the year with something nearing 100 million viewers.

Advertisers are guaranteed a vast audience and hope to cash in on the exposure their products receive. Savvy advertisers often play to people's emotions and avoid concepts that lead to any real critical thinking. Emotive ads bypass our conscious mind and go directly into our subconscious mind.

In this context, the Avacodos from Mexico commercial will be seen by an enormous audience. As we discussed earlier, the main message contained in the TV commercial is that secret societies are ridiculous. It's a sort of satire on the concept of secret orders like the freemasons or the illuminati. The characters in the parodied secret order are not that bright and are in fact constructed to be lovable bumbling idiots.

They invoke long ridiculed 'conspiracy theories' such as Bigfoot, the lunar landing and pointlessly squabble over their true nature. Immediately, an association is made between these unrelated topics and blend them together into one big messy guacamole-tinged conspiracy pastiche.

They throw in 'Deflate-gate', in a nod to seasoned football fans adding, "We had a fall guy for that one".

The members of the secret order display their whacky personalities and everyone's seeming inability to keep even the most basic secret. They reveal themselves to each other by removing their masks and at one point someone takes a picture with their smartphone and uploads it to the internet, again showing their incompetence as members of a secret order.

The underlying message is:

Look at this bunch of useless idiots. How could a society NOT have a few morons that would tip off the general public to their activities? And Smartphones, wouldn't we see some photos emerge in this day and age?

This ad implies - Look at this bunch of pathetic losers. They're lovable but ultimately stupid. You don't want to be part of this group of wackos, do you?

The culmination of the inane commercial spot is when a member poses the question about Subliminal Messaging. "That doesn't exist, does it?" A moment later they come-to in the middle of a guacamole feeding frenzy, lampooning the notion that advertisers have the power to control human behavior.

(Of course, advertisers do not have this power. Yet, their messages and images resonate in our subconcious and later we may associate their products with how we feel about it.)

There is a certain self-awareness in this ad, an awareness what kinds of things people are talking about in their homes, workplace, or online.

At least to me, it seems specifically designed to counter the pizzagate/pedogate investigation as it continues to spread despite efforts to contain it by the power elite.

If the discussion of secret societies is publicly acknowledged in some manner (advertising), then it is thought that the message around the issue can be redirected, deflected, refocused, reposessed and manipulated. This is part of a concerted effort to condition the masses on How and What to think about the PG investigation. They want to condition the masses to react emotionally (laughter/ridicule), they do not want you to think critically about this. Don't think. Just eat some Avocados from Mexico you dumb fucks.

Here is a 4 minute podcast talking about how Super Bowl ads that do well generate emotion / sentiment:

http://www.theadguy.ca/podcast/super-bowl-2015.html

There are people discussing this on Voat.co and other platforms.

Here is a critique and deconstruction of the Avocados from Mexico from