Corn flakes, sliced peaches, and Emilio Estevez in Repo Man |
Reading Catharine Charlesworth’s recent review of Wreck-It Ralph on Critics at Large got me thinking about the remarkable way that brands and commercial products have so effectively permeated our lives – becoming so much a part of who we are, and the stories we tell about ourselves. For some, this may be a kind of tragedy, but I don’t really think it is. The degree to which popular culture and personal identity has become bound up in particular brands and products isn’t in itself something to mourn or something to embrace with any enthusiasm, but it is a reflection of our particular moment of modernity. Apple versus PC, Coke versus Pepsi, iPhone versus Android – these choices genuinely matter to many people, and running from it in the popular representations of our reality only serves to make those representations less, well, representative.
Catharine notes, rightly I think, that the integration of certain real video games into Wreck-It Ralph seems to genuinely add to the universe it portrays, and even gives real entertainment value to the viewers, who (like anyone) are always delighted to see themselves, and their interests, reflected back to them in the movies and television shows they watch. Of course, that isn’t the only reason why we are seeing more and more product placement (what is often more politely now called “brand integration”) in our TV shows and movies, but nonetheless it is worth pointing out that there are still better and worse ways of going about it.
And with an eye on the worst of it, there was, I confess, another, entirely serendipitous catalyst for this line of thought. Turning on the television with my breakfast last week (I won’t tell you which brand of cereal I was eating), I happened to catch precisely the two minutes of ABC’s The View when this happened.
Whoopi’s not-so-organic segue into the segment: “Speaking of something really different….” is almost impossible to appreciate on
anything but the most craven terms. Moreover, at no point in the piece does
anyone call attention to the simple fact that ABC and Disney have long been the
same company, or that there is nothing newsworthy or notable about a major
corporation’s promotional campaign for a new video game, especially as
Christmas Day approaches. But what made the segment so profoundly painful for
me at the time was Barbara Walters’s hesitation to play along. Watch her stare
intently at the newly-designed Mickey Mouse ears in her hands while Whoopi speaks and your heart will break. All I could
imagine was Walters wondering to herself how five long decades of journalistic
integrity could possibly have come to this one moment. “I have my pride,”
Barbara protests, and the others respond as if mere vanity was keeping her from
putting it on, until she finally acquiesces. It is a heart-breaking 90 seconds,
and just might be looked back on as the moment when reality itself “jumped the
shark”.
From Milton Berle’s Texaco Star Theater, to the
practice of having television actors hawk their sponsor’s wares in character at the beginning or end of a program, product placement has a
long history on American network television. Whatever one can say about the
current dominance of the practice, you can’t say that television is ‘suddenly’ selling
out. Network television (and radio before it) has always been driven by
advertising. This has been true of some of the best and the worst shows they’ve
given us. The classic business model for broadcast TV has meant that for much
of its history commercial television didn’t sell shows, it sold viewers. Still,
art – as always – found a way. Whatever incentive drove the network executive
(like arts patrons of old) to push in a particular direction, creative
individuals still did amazing work, even within those frames. What is
relatively new is the impact that the rise of premium cable, syndication, video
tape-and then DVDs and direct downloads have had on that old business model.
Networks are struggling in the 1000-channel universe and their market share
(and therefore their bottom-line) has been hit hard. Advertising has been the
price we’ve paid for freely available broadcast television. For that reason,
there’s something to celebrate in the broadcast networks’ valiant efforts to
resist the move to cable and subscription services. Still, these old models die
hard, and in this era of PVRs and iTunes, networks continue to see money-making
potential in soliciting advertising. But it has gotten more creative, and as
always there are more or less workable ways of doing it.
One of the more creative strategies has been to create
series that are in fact their own products.
Nathan Fillion and Stana Katic on Castle |
The other much more common and obvious way is to integrate
those brands and products into the show itself – in more or less subtle ways,
like in the cars characters drive or the cell phones they use. This, for me, is
rarely a problem. And in fact, we all live in such a brand-saturated universe,
that the absence of name brands is often more distracting than their presence. Consider
those roomfuls of Dell or Mac laptops with their logos clumsily taped over or
that inevitable moment in almost every crime procedural when the detective sits
down at the computer and opens to some generic search engine – often ‘AskWeb’
or ‘Websearch’ or something – when by last account over 85 percent of all web
searches begin with Google. (Though if you are a watching an NBC show, chances
are the character will open to Bing because of long standing partnership
between Microsoft and NBC Universal. Bing’s efforts to penetrate our TV screens
often borders on the absurd, and I can’t help but reminded of J. Michael Straczynski’s gag
‘Zima’ sign in an early episode of Babylon 5 whenever a TV character uses Bing as a verb.) But
personally I find my suspension of disbelief interrupted when TV characters
appear to operate in some kind of parallel universe without Google and
Facebook. Last year, the launch of new iPad was essentially the A-plot of
an entire episode of Modern Family. It not only made perfect sense that
Phil would be excited about it, but it also made for very funny television.
The Big Bang Theory eagerly plugs DC and Marvel
superheroes, and any of a number of films and other TV shows, and these are
entirely organic to the lives of the characters (and it is highly doubtful that
DC has solicited Chuck Lorre for the visibility of the Green Lantern and Flash
t-shirts Sheldon continues to wear, though no doubt legality demanded that
these copyrighted images be given the green light before getting on screen). The
pixelated t-shirts that permeated every reality show testify to the effort
required to get permissions for such images.
A scene from Warehouse 13 |
A recent episode of New Girl also crossed the line.
The story has the recently unemployed Jess (Zooey Deschanel)
try her hand modeling at a car show. The sequence – Jess in excessively high
heels trying and failing to stay upright on a spinning platform – goes on for two
full minutes, and the entire time a spokesman lists all the exciting new
features of the new Ford Focus. While it has some genuine slapstick appeal, I
couldn’t help shaking my head at the utter shamelessness of it.
Community's Dean (Jim Rash) and "Subway" (Travis Schuldt) |
Whether it’s Snapple, the brilliant “Can we have our money now?”
Verizon plug, or Cisco Systems, 30
Rock has long led the way in scripted television for self-aware product
placement. For all that though, 30 Rock has ‘integrated’ dozens
of brands over the years, from Burger King to IKEA and of course, the most
blatant of all, the NBC brand itself. But what fan would deny that this is part
is what makes the show so amazingly funny and clever?
And Stephen Colbert, and The Colbert Report,
takes this to another level altogether, with his perennial promotion of his
flavour of Ben and Jerry’s ice cream (an act of product integration that
crossed shows and networks with his ‘feud’ with Jimmy Fallon), his regular and
exaggerated on-screen enjoyment of Bud Lite Lime, or the Doritos sponsorship of
his 2008 election reports, the so-called “Hail to the Cheese Stephen Colbert's
Nacho Cheese Doritos 2008 Presidential Campaign Coverage”. These unrepentant plugs
are entirely in line with his on-screen persona, while simultaneously
commenting on the insidious nature of precisely those forms of advertising. It
is both profitable and subversive, and in many ways a perfect example of how
satire works.
Product placement isn’t going anywhere. Even if there was a
hypothetical shift into all new forms of media, the fact that we can
fast-forward through commercials means that the only way to get us to watch is
to integrate product promotion somehow into our shows. But some shows do it
right, and some shows do it wrong – and for those shows that manage to get it right,
the effect is definitely worth the effort.
– Mark Clamen is a writer, critic, film programmer and lifelong television enthusiast. He lives in Toronto, where he often lectures on television, film, and popular culture.
– Mark Clamen is a writer, critic, film programmer and lifelong television enthusiast. He lives in Toronto, where he often lectures on television, film, and popular culture.
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