Actually, I wonder if there is a location bias too. I think we are mainly UK based on here (well, based or originating from).
I'm almost certain that advert is illegal in the UK as showing spirited driving in a car is not allowed in UK car ads, which is why we end up with all these obscure arty lifestyle car adverts.
So, in the context of other US focused adverts, perhaps it's seen as less ASBO hooning style, and more sporty fun style. I remember seeing some sporty car ads during NFL last year (Acura, Chevy Corvette, one of the Korean brands) all of which had cars being driven fast, it stood out as something I hadn't seen for many years.
On a similar, but unrelated note, US ads can also draw direct comparison to competitors, something else that doesn't happen in the UK, which I assume is down to a law too.
"Here at Verizon, we are 2x cheaper than AT&T for our basic family package" or whatever.
If it was allowed, surely every other ad would be Ryanair pointing out you'd be an idiot to fly BA who cost 10x as much and arrive late more often.
The drone work in the Beckham ad is nice too, though having now watched it again, I come out with 3 thoughts - why would I want an SUV if I was going to do donuts, why did they bother fitting a thing that reads out your schedule when you can't hear it, and who would spec that thing in red.