Don't the commercials have a disclaimer at the bottom?
The owners manual has a disclaimer that clearly states that the Raptor is designed for more abuse than a standard F150 blah, blah, blah, but excedding those limits will damage, shocks, axles, frame, etc. etc. I'll let one of the Raptor owners quote it word for word.
The only way to bend that frame there is by hitting the bump stops hard. There really isn't any way to hit those bump stops that hard, that isn't obvious as excessive offroad abuse to most drivers.
If the shocks were cooked on a previous run.............then maybe you have a legit claim. I despise Fox shocks. I won't even run them on my mountain bike. Fox has allways let me down.
Even still, a slightly bent frame is regular wear and tear for the off roading these are pictured doing. It's still a bada$$ truck for more responsible owners. If ford or an offroad shop strengthens the frame, then something else is going to break, if that part is strengthened then the next weakest link is going to break, and so on, and so on. I wouldn't exactly call this truck weak.....
If you were to drive on the same jump as the commercial, and land as well as the pro driver driving, then your Raptor would likely survive just like the one in the commercial. But one crooked landing is all it takes....... I think someones driving isn't up to par. And obviously it's perfectly normal for a part to only last 10% of it's normal expected life when the words " high speed offroad" or "air time" are invloved.
My box stock Mach1 deos 12.9 in the 1/4 mile just as Ford advertised. But it'll only do that so many times before it starts tearing itsself up. Autocrossing it requires me to get it up off the ground and tighten every singe bolt under the car. Highperformance driving equals highperfomance wear and maintenance. No way is a bent frame warranty.
It would be cool if they offered a stock F150 XLT regular cab, long bed, FX4, with the Raptor body, wheels, and tires. "Raptor light" would be an even bigger seller and they could probally get them out the door for $32,000.
Honda advertises thier dirtbikes jumping 100+ feet. That deosn't mean you can warranty a bent fork or frameset.
Ps: I noticed Top Gear has a Henessey Raptor review. Don't buy Henessey, they have a habit of just rebadging an engine and not doing half the work they claim to on Vipers.