J. Stephen McDonald
December 2nd, 2005, 02:35 PM
This issue is certainly nothing new, as "Product Placement" has been around since the beginning and is present in movies, as well. There's also "The List", which rewards TV personalities for mentioning products, by sending them substantial packages of the merchandise. But this has been a passive and barely noticeable practice.
However, this week on "CSI-New York", a whole different level of this has been breached. A CSI agent is shown receiving a "Text-Talk" message from his girlfriend and explains to his partner just what it is. Moments later, they go to a commercial for something called "Cool Play Master Realtone Text". They say that you, too, can have this cell phone service you saw on CSI-New York.
If this is tolerated, there'll be no end to it. It'll be worse and more ubiquitous than pop-up ads on the Internet. We now have public stadiums and school arenas named for companies who paid big bucks for the privilege. Even high school tournaments and championship games are known by the names of banks, dot-com companies, etc. It appears that the business world can't make a go of it by using straight commercials and promotions, but figures they have to take you by surprise with this "Ambush Advertising". The concept of "free" public broadcasts has mostly disappeared. But now, even
premium cable and pay-per-view channels and in-theatre movies are shucking ads.
My newest HDTV tuner/DVR has no "skip" button that is designated and I'd bet that commercial interests called that shot. Luckily, a discussion forum guru provided a secret code that awakens the skip function that was left hiding in the unit's operating chip. My newer DV/S-VHS VCR has no skip button on its remote controler, but an older remote from the same company can make the VCR do a 30-second skip. Eventually, will we see programing systems that require you to watch and listen to commercials, before you can continue viewing the program? Will all audio and video equipment be integrated into a control system to the extent that only by leaving the room, could you avoid commercials? Actually, I have faith that subversives like us, will find ways to avoid most of this nonsense. I would never buy a product or service that used stealth or ambush tactics, but I wonder how much of the population will resist it? I feel better now.
However, this week on "CSI-New York", a whole different level of this has been breached. A CSI agent is shown receiving a "Text-Talk" message from his girlfriend and explains to his partner just what it is. Moments later, they go to a commercial for something called "Cool Play Master Realtone Text". They say that you, too, can have this cell phone service you saw on CSI-New York.
If this is tolerated, there'll be no end to it. It'll be worse and more ubiquitous than pop-up ads on the Internet. We now have public stadiums and school arenas named for companies who paid big bucks for the privilege. Even high school tournaments and championship games are known by the names of banks, dot-com companies, etc. It appears that the business world can't make a go of it by using straight commercials and promotions, but figures they have to take you by surprise with this "Ambush Advertising". The concept of "free" public broadcasts has mostly disappeared. But now, even
premium cable and pay-per-view channels and in-theatre movies are shucking ads.
My newest HDTV tuner/DVR has no "skip" button that is designated and I'd bet that commercial interests called that shot. Luckily, a discussion forum guru provided a secret code that awakens the skip function that was left hiding in the unit's operating chip. My newer DV/S-VHS VCR has no skip button on its remote controler, but an older remote from the same company can make the VCR do a 30-second skip. Eventually, will we see programing systems that require you to watch and listen to commercials, before you can continue viewing the program? Will all audio and video equipment be integrated into a control system to the extent that only by leaving the room, could you avoid commercials? Actually, I have faith that subversives like us, will find ways to avoid most of this nonsense. I would never buy a product or service that used stealth or ambush tactics, but I wonder how much of the population will resist it? I feel better now.