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Scuba

(53,475 posts)
Sun May 13, 2012, 02:48 PM May 2012

NYT's Thomas L. Friedman: This Column Is Not Sponsored by Anyone

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/13/opinion/sunday/friedman-this-column-is-not-sponsored-by-anyone.html


PORING through Harvard philosopher Michael Sandel’s new book, “What Money Can’t Buy: The Moral Limits of Markets,” I found myself over and over again turning pages and saying, “I had no idea.”

I had no idea that in the year 2000, as Sandel notes, “a Russian rocket emblazoned with a giant Pizza Hut logo carried advertising into outer space,” or that in 2001, the British novelist Fay Weldon wrote a book commissioned by the jewelry company Bulgari and that, in exchange for payment, “the author agreed to mention Bulgari jewelry in the novel at least a dozen times.” I knew that stadiums are now named for corporations, but had no idea that now “even sliding into home is a corporate-sponsored event,” writes Sandel. “New York Life Insurance Company has a deal with 10 Major League Baseball teams that triggers a promotional plug every time a player slides safely into base. When the umpire calls the runner safe at home plate, a corporate logo appears on the television screen, and the play-by-play announcer must say, ‘Safe at home. Safe and secure. New York Life.’ ”

And while I knew that retired baseball players sell their autographs for $15 a pop, I had no idea that Pete Rose, who was banished from baseball for life for betting, has a Web site that, Sandel writes, “sells memorabilia related to his banishment. For $299, plus shipping and handling, you can buy a baseball autographed by Rose and inscribed with an apology: ‘I’m sorry I bet on baseball.’ For $500, Rose will send you an autographed copy of the document banishing him from the game.”

I had no idea that in 2001 an elementary school in New Jersey became America’s first public school “to sell naming rights to a corporate sponsor,” Sandel writes. “In exchange for a $100,000 donation from a local supermarket, it renamed its gym ‘ShopRite of Brooklawn Center.’ ... A high school in Newburyport, Mass., offered naming rights to the principal’s office for $10,000. ... By 2011, seven states had approved advertising on the sides of school buses.”

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NYT's Thomas L. Friedman: This Column Is Not Sponsored by Anyone (Original Post) Scuba May 2012 OP
I don't know why people are so enthralled by pro sports high density May 2012 #1
It's religion, sans guilt. Scuba May 2012 #2
This stuff has been focus grouped and psychologically studied to a fare-thee-well.. Fumesucker May 2012 #6
piss on Friedman KG May 2012 #3
+1. provis99 May 2012 #12
'Way back in the 1940s malthaussen May 2012 #4
Well, Mitt's trying to buy zbdent May 2012 #8
Thomas Friedman trying to burnish his "moderate" credentials, bbgrunt May 2012 #5
Evidently this isn't a common subject of conversation among taxi drivers.. n/t Fumesucker May 2012 #7
Need to take this up with Earl de la Warr. dimbear May 2012 #9
Michael Sandel is pretty neat tralala May 2012 #10
This week - Tom Friedman once again fails to pay attention!! hatrack May 2012 #11

high density

(13,397 posts)
1. I don't know why people are so enthralled by pro sports
Sun May 13, 2012, 02:51 PM
May 2012

I can't stand the commercialism of it all. And does this sort of nonsense really sell New York Life policies? If anything this sort of annoying, intrusive advertising makes me more likely to avoid the brand.

Fumesucker

(45,851 posts)
6. This stuff has been focus grouped and psychologically studied to a fare-thee-well..
Sun May 13, 2012, 03:01 PM
May 2012

It's not supposed to work on your conscious brain at all, the commercials are just background noise to a great many people, for those of us who can't ignore the TV it's a considerably different experience.

Those for whom the commercials are just background noise are the intended audience for most commercials..

Edited for speling.

malthaussen

(17,237 posts)
4. 'Way back in the 1940s
Sun May 13, 2012, 02:56 PM
May 2012

Robert Heinlein wrote a story called "The Man Who Sold the Moon." In one scene, he gets funding from Coke to use colored powder to paint their logo on the lunar surface. He shows them a pic of the Hammer and Sickle and says something to the effect of "Do you want them to do it first."

Everything is for sale. Remember Colbert bargaining with the SC convention for naming rights to the primary? I am amazed that the federal elections haven't been sold to the highest bidder.


-- Mal

tralala

(239 posts)
10. Michael Sandel is pretty neat
Sun May 13, 2012, 06:47 PM
May 2012

I always liked when they would show his lectures on PBS... talking about fairly complicated ideas in a very straightforward, easy to understand way... really performing a valuable public service IMO. They should air more philosophy lectures on TV.

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