Anti-Golden Arches Doc Vs. MTV
The Hollywood Reporter's Greg Kilday writes that
Morgan Spurlock's stomach churning ode to the ultimate hi-carb, higher fat diet,
"Supersize Me", might not be the subject of commericals on
MTV. The
public spat began with a news release issued by IDP under the headline "MTV
Refuses to Air 'Super Size' TV Spots," alleging that the "network claims (the)
spots are 'disparaging to fast-food restaurants.'
"According to IDP
spokesman RJ Millard, because Spurlock's award-winning documentary is expanding
into additional theaters this weekend, IDP approached MTV about an ad buy that
would see its commercial play on the youth-oriented music net over the Memorial
Day weekend.
Millard said MTV told IDP
that it would not accept the spot without revisions and that it would not run
the spot, once revised, in any commercial pods that also featured ads for any
fast-food restaurants. IDP declined to make the changes and issued its release
instead.But an MTV
spokeswoman disputed IDP's version of the events. The channel did initially
suggest some edits for the spot, according to a spokeswoman, but ultimately
accepted the original version.
By MTV's account, IDP
then withdrew the commercial, "and instead of submitting the commercial, they
chose to put out a press
release.""IDP, Samuel
Goldwyn, Roadside Attractions and our advertising agency were never informed
that the ads were approved," Millard countered. "I've got the correspondence
from them -- an e-mail that says they wouldn't run it without changes. Now that
we've gone out with our story, they're changing their tune and saying they
approved the ad, but we were never
notified."MTV also
denied IDP's claim that the commercial was nixed out of concern for other
fast-food advertisers. "The edits were not about conflicting with other
advertisers," an MTV spokeswoman said. "It was about the content of the
advertisements."The
content MTV initially found objectionable in the "Super Size Me" commercial was
a shot of Spurlock vomiting after ingesting a hamburger and a reference that
Spurlock makes about how the hamburger could
"kill."
(not
a McDonalds, but presumably the home of a deadly burger just the
same)
Posted: Thu - May 27, 2004 at 07:44 PM