Posted by iTVX Staff on 10th July 2007
The NBC show “The Office” will have what amounts to an open casting call for local businesses willing to have products on the set or be mentioned in dialogue.
Next week, Philip Shea, the prop master for the Emmy-winning sitcom about a fictional paper supply company based in Scranton, will visit The Mall at Steamtown to meet with businesses.
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Posted by iTVX Staff on 10th July 2007
We have all heard of product placement on TV; the ever present Ford trucks in 24 and the interwoven Toyota Yaris in the animated Smallville Legends on the WB hit are a fact of life in our TiVo world.
Should we place blame on the early Bond films for having spawned this marketing channel? The 1974 film The Man with the Golden Gun featured extensive use of AMC cars. Or do we now forgive them, having tarnished their own brand with such overabundance of products in 1997’s Tomorrow Never Dies that we truly felt like we were watching a commercial? Heineken, Smirnoff, BMW, Visa, and Ericsson spent $98M worldwide in ads and promotions tied to the film.
Sure we hate it as consumers but the benefits to be had from that placement that pays off are significant enough to make your career. Though Bond films are overexposed, BMW Z3 sales skyrocketed after Pierce took one for a ride and Pixar’s Toy Story brought toy maker Slinky back from the brink when they prompted a 4000% increase in Etch-a-Sketch sales. I’m not surprised that TiVo led to an 84% increase in product placement as advertisers sought ways to get around its miraculous ad skipping technology.
What is a surprise is the little commercial that could; without which, one might mistakenly think that product placement only applied to shows.
Scuttlebutt has it phones were ringing off the hook from San Francisco to South Africa following Apple’s “Calamari” commercial in which Pacific Catch was briefly featured as the seafood restaurant closest to the phone’s user. Sure enough, in the days following the spot, traffic to PacificCatch.com was off the charts as the site actually registered some relevant reach.
Have you heard the one about Apple and their iPhone?
Funny thing was, calamari wasn’t on the menu raising serious questions about the accuracy of the iPhone’s search experience
Sure the search was for “seafood” but any search engine worth its salt should be able to interpret its users’ intentions. They all do that don’t they??
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