Summary
- Campaign: “House Arrest” (for the Fiat 500 Abarth).
- Focus: Strengthening the Abarth’s “wicked” and rebellious brand identity.
- Core Message: The Fiat 500 Abarth is the perfect vehicle for those who live life on the edge and refuse to follow the rules.
- Key Insight: At the time, Charlie Sheen was the most talked-about “rebel” in global pop culture. By placing him in the car, Fiat aligned the Abarth with a sense of notoriety and high-octane fun, moving it even further away from its “cute” city-car origins.
- Agency: The spot was created by the Detroit-based agency Doner.
The Fiat commercial “House Arrest,” released in 2012, served as the high-profile follow-up to the viral Super Bowl spot “Seduction”. It was designed to reinforce the high-performance Fiat 500 Abarth as the “bad boy” of the brand’s lineup.
Ad plot
The commercial leverages Charlie Sheen’s real-life public reputation at the time to create a “small but wicked” persona for the car.
- The scene opens inside a lavish Hollywood mansion where a glamorous party is in full swing
- A black Fiat 500 Abarth is shown racing and power-sliding through the mansion’s hallways, weaving past guests and expensive decor.
- The car screeches to a stop, and Charlie Sheen exits the driver’s seat. He is shown wearing a prominent electronic house-arrest ankle monitor.
- Romanian supermodel Catrinel Menghia (the star of the previous “Seduction” ad) approaches him flirtatiously. Sheen looks at the camera and says, “I love being under house arrest. What do I get for good behavior?”.
- The commercial concludes with the phrase: “Not all bad boys are created equal”.








Reception & Recall
The ad was a masterstroke of “real-time” celebrity marketing, leveraging Sheen’s massive media presence to gain instant attention.
- Audiences immediately connected the car’s “wicked” tagline with Sheen’s public image. It was a rare example of a celebrity’s personal controversies actually enhancing a brand’s appeal rather than damaging it.
- The ad successfully solidified the Abarth as the “anti-establishment” choice in the small car segment. It proved that the car possessed enough “attitude” to satisfy even the most demanding adrenaline seekers.
- Because it featured Sheen during his peak period of viral catchphrases, the ad gained significant traction online and in entertainment news cycles, providing Fiat with massive “earned media” coverage.
