Real Name: Bob Kaufman
Salary Deal : $100,000
Kaufman collected a low $100,000 a year for his appearances in the company’s commercials, but they’re actually his commercials because it’s his company. He’s the real Bob. He’s worth a wild $26 billion. His offbeat and memorable commercials ran a huge campaign during the 1990s, and in 1997 they ran five hundred commercials a week in Connecticut alone.
With Little Bob, a miniature version of himself by his side, Bob’s Furniture turned into a success. They’ve even sponsored national football teams like the Patriots, Giants, Chargers, and Steelers. Good-guy Kaufman has also donated quite a lot of money to causes like cancer research, Veterans Home, and children’s charities.
The Orbit Gum Girl
Real Name: Farris Patton
Salary Deal : $500,000
With a shining smile that has an audible gleam, Farris Patton received $500,000 for her role as the Orbit Gum Girl. Her simple delivery and classy acting were enough to get anyone to try a new brand of gum. While no one will say Patton is an acting star, she has appeared in The Mr. Peabody & Sherman Show, 90210, Little Hercules, Redline, The Playbook", and more.
She has also appeared on Jimmy Kimmel Live in skit roles and has starred in various shows as herself, including a TV movie about commercials' most famous faces. She has also appeared on Entertainment Tonight as a model.
Esurance “Stuck in the 90s” Guy
Real Name: Dennis Quaid
Salary Deal : $120,000
Esurance certainly wasn't stuck in the nineties, and when they salaried Dennis Quaid for $120,000 to be the premier actor in this campaign of commercials, it offered a huge boost to the subsidiary of Allstate.
Previous Esurance commercials could only be described as painful. Quaid was able to bring a straight-shooting, every-man quality to the company, helping Esurance to rebrand itself from an afterthought of the insurance market to a company that wants to make things easy for the consumer, as opposed to the difficult other options people had at the time. While most of the insurance business was stuck in the nineties, Esurance showed there was a better way.
The “Whassup?” Guy
Real Name: Charles Stone III
Salary Deal: $8 million
It launched a brand new...noise...into the lexicon, but the man behind the sound, Charlies Stone III, has gone on to become a famous member of the entertainment industry. As an actor and director, he's worked with Nick Cannon, Bernie Mac, and plenty of other famous faces, directing Drumline, Mr. 3000, Paid in Full, and lots more. He's done music videos like The Roots' What They Do.
While the ad itself was simple and memorable, it also netted Stone eight million dollars. The Budweiser commercial just had a pair of goofs shouting at each other, and it ended up good for all. Unless you hate “Whassup.”
The Guy From Sonic Commercials
Real Name : T.J. Jagodowski
Salary Deal : $300,000
As an improv comedian, T.J.'s unique brand of off-the-cuff humor caught the eye of Sonic when they were on the hunt for a new face for their ads. Jagodowski is a Chicago-based actor who appeared alongside actor Pete Grosz, and the two almost always improvised their lines.
Jagodowski has won Chicago Improv Festival's “Best Improviser” award. His deal with Sonic netted him $300,000, but he's also had roles in films such as Get Hard, The Ice Harvest, Stranger than Fiction, and more. He's also had a bit role in the Fox show Prison Break.