Spider-Man 2 ads going on MLB bases

saint

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Jan 10, 2002
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What a freaking joke!


http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/20...bc.bbo.spider.manonbase.ap/index.html?cnn=yes


p1_spider_ap.jpg
 

toastonastick

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Nov 25, 2003
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if this is true it is stupid. The cameras will have to zoom in close to see it, thus it might as well just be a commercial. I dont like the idea
 

AR182

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it just cheapens the game.

here is a good article on this:


Pastime for sale, going cheap





Soon, coming to a Major League ballpark near you, a minor-league idea so distasteful, so ridiculous, so disrespectful, it can only get worse. The people who run the game of baseball - and what a beautiful job they're doing - have agreed to put advertising on the bases and on-deck circles for the movie "Spider-Man 2." Why? Because "Psycho" isn't currently in release. Because it means more money for each team.

It's the selling of baseball and it ain't stopping here. The fix is in. Once upon a time, you had to hit a double to get on second base. Now you just have to buy it.


Spider-Man ads on the field, on scoreboards, all over the lot, won't sell a single extra ticket when this marketing campaign goes into effect for the interleague games of June 11-13. This may come as news to baseball, but fans come to stadiums, or turn on their TV sets, to watch the games, not the ads. The Yankees that weekend will be playing the San Diego Padres, a team few care about unless David Wells is pitching for the Pods. Baseball can put more advertising on Wells' uniform than a Transit Authority bus.


The Yankees' share would be upward of $100,000 from the movie studio, which is only parking-meter money for George. Small-market teams, like Kansas City, playing the Mets that weekend, will earn less. (Plenty of good seats still available.)


This is just the beginning, folks, and the only surprise is that baseball, grandpa's game, our slowest-moving sport, is trying to MTV its product. Baseball might hope the fans aren't offended, but you already know baseball doesn't care what the fans think.


Steroids? Pete Rose? A $95 ticket at Yankee Stadium? Designated hitters in one league and not the other? Did I mention steroids? Players pulling down obscene salaries to hit .220 and make Visa commercials? Owners who don't care what kind of garbage they put on the field? Every World Series game at night so kids can't watch them?


Hey, chill, and join me in in singing, "Take me out to the ballgame, take me out with the crowd, so I can see what's playing at the multiplex. .
 

vinnie

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BLUM, AP Sports Writer

NEW YORK - Spider-Man is coming to a base near you. In the latest example of a sponsor's stamp on the sports world, ads for the movie "Spider-Man 2" will be placed atop bases at major league ballparks during games from June 11-13.


AP Photo



The promotion, announced Wednesday, is part of baseball's pitch to appeal to younger fans ? and make money along the way.


But the New York Yankees (news), one of 15 teams at home that weekend, balked at the idea after the deal was announced. They will put ads on the bases only during batting practice, and then just for one game, team spokesman Rick Cerrone said.


While commemorative logos have been on bases for special events such as the All-Star game or World Series (news - web sites), the Hall of Fame knew of no other commercial ads on bases, spokesman Jeff Idelson said.


"This was a unique chance to combine what is a sort of a universally popular character and our broad fan base, including the youth market we're trying to reach out to," said Bob DuPuy, baseball's chief operating officer. "It doesn't impact the play or performance of the game."


Nowadays, ads can show up just about anywhere in sports.


Telecasts of major league and college football games, for example, include virtual ads visible just to TV viewers. College football bowl games are named for advertisers. Boxers' backs bear stenciled ads. Just last week, a court ruled that Kentucky Derby jockeys could wear sponsors' patches on their uniforms.


"I guess it's inevitable, but it's sad," said Fay Vincent, a former baseball commissioner and former president of Columbia Pictures, which is releasing "Spider-Man 2."


"I'm old-fashioned. I'm a romanticist. I think the bases should be protected from this. I feel the same way I do when I see jockeys wears ads: Maybe this is progress, but there's something in me that regrets it very much," he added.


Chicago Cubs (news) manager Dusty Baker didn't think it would make a difference.


"I don't care," he said. "You've still got to touch base, whether they got spiders, scorpions or snakes on them."


The movie promotion has been in the works for more than a year and will include ad buys and ballpark events, such as giving masks to fans, said Jacqueline Parkes, baseball's senior vice president for marketing and advertising.


The ads, about 4-by-4-inches with a red background and yellow webbing, won't appear on home plate. The Yankees did agree to allow ads in the on-deck circles during their series that weekend against San Diego.


"Spider-Man 2" opens June 30, and the weekend in early June was picked because it is during interleague play, which draws higher attendance than usual.


"We need to reach out to a younger demographic to bring them to the ballpark," Parkes said. "They are looking for nontraditional breakthrough ways to convey 'Spider-Man' messaging. ... It's the future of how we generate excitement inside the stadium and about the game itself."


Baseball will receive about $3.6 million in a deal negotiated by Major League Baseball Properties with Marvel Studios and Columbia Pictures, a division of Sony Inc., a high-ranking baseball executive said on condition of anonymity.


The Yankees and Boston Red Sox (news) will get more than $100,000 each, the team executive said, also on condition of anonymity. Most of the other 13 teams playing at home that weekend will get about $50,000 apiece, the team executive said.





Parkes said the amount a team receives depends on the level of its participation. Geoffrey Ammer, president of marketing for the Columbia TriStar Motion Picture Group, was not immediately available for comment, spokesman Steve Elzer said.

In a twist, Amanda Aardsma, the sister of Giants rookie pitcher David Aardsma, has a small role in the movie.

Ralph Nader (news - web sites), a presidential candidate and consumer advocate, criticized the deal. He wrote Tuesday to baseball commissioner Bud Selig, denouncing the decision to have ads on uniforms during the season-opening series in March between the Yankees and Tampa Bay Devil Rays (news) in Tokyo.

"It's gotten beyond grotesque," Nader said. "The fans have to revolt here. Otherwise, they'll be looking at advertisements between advertisements."

Gary Ruskin, executive director of Commercial Alert, called for baseball fans to boycott Sony products. Nader is the chair of the organization's advisory board.

U.S. Rep George Nethercutt, a Washington Republican who is a former part-owner of the Greensboro Bats and the Michigan Battle Cats minor league teams, sent a letter to Selig protesting the decision.

"Little Leaguers deserve to see their heroes slide into bases, not ads," wrote Nethercutt, who is running for U.S. Senate.

Todd Zeile of the New York Mets (news) didn't mind the ads.

"We're an entertainment outlet. there's going to be commercialism," he said. "At least, at this point, we don't look like NASCAR (news - web sites) drivers or World Cup soccer players. That's not to say that's not in the future."

In separate promotions, the bases also will feature pink ribbons Sunday as part of a Mother's Day promotion to raise breast-cancer awareness, and they will have blue ribbons on Father's Day, June 20, to raise prostate-cancer awareness.

John Hirschbeck, head of the World Umpires Association, said the ads won't make it harder for umpires to make calls at the bases. And it wouldn't bother him if umpires' uniforms had ads ? as long as they share the profit.

"We've got it on jockeys' pants. Why not?" he said.

Vincent, brought into baseball by commissioner A. Bartlett Giamatti, wondered how his friend would have reacted. Giamatti, who died in 1989, rhapsodized about baseball is essays such as "The Green Fields of the Mind," in which he referred to second base as a "jagged rock" in the middle of the field.

"Wherever he is, Bart is spinning," Vincent said. "It's a good thing he's not around."
 

sharky17

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SURPRISE, SURPRISE........

Baseball reverses course: Spider-Man ads on bases don't fly
May 6, 2004
SportsLine.com wire reports

NEW YORK -- Spider-Man ads on bases didn't fly with baseball fans.



A day after announcing a novel promotion to put advertisements on bases next month, Major League Baseball reversed course Thursday and eliminated that part of its marketing deal for Spider-Man 2.
 

IntenseOperator

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Advertising on the jockey silks

also on the bases


You will see much more of this type stuff because of things like tivo. Also, I think readership is down of the printed word and people are using software to stop pop-ups.

Companies need to get the word out and will one way or another.

It's just the start.

Remember when it started on the naming of the all sacred bowl games?
 

dawgball

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The cameras do not have to zoom in on them. With the media buzz that has floated around this story, the Spider Man 2 movie has already received its $3.2 million in publicity.

That's how this shit works.

I don't have a problem with it anyway. I just wish the price of a brew would be offset by this extra revenue!:tongue
 

NickiD

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Heard today - they are now NOT going to do this - but look at all the free publicity that they have gotten just from the buzz and now the annoucement that they aren't going to.

Almost makes you wonder if this wasn't the plan and somebody in baseball got paid anyway.........:rolleyes:
 

dawgball

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So who's the big winner? The fan? No way. The movie wins because it now has all of the publicity for free.

What would have been humorous is to see all of the herd mentality companies follow suit and pay for the ads. They would have never received any value in these because the value was being the first to do it and get the free press.

Anyone who gets uptight about this stuff needs to read "How to Stop Worrying and Start Living". If you've read it and are still in a tizzie, re-read it because you missed the point. Does it really matter that a logo is on a base or the player's ass for that matter?

Bud Selig once again shows he is spineless, IMO.
 

IntenseOperator

DeweyOxburger
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off the bases for now

Bet you whoever has those is thinking they would make a nice collector's item down the road.;)
 
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