In watching what I assume was a rerun this morning, I noticed that Sony provided prizes in the closing credits. Apple did not. When giving prize descriptions, Sony was not mentioned, while the Ipod and MacBook names were. Is there some reasoning behind this (e.g. a CBS conflict) or is it sloppy production work?
Curious, what was the Sony product?
WRT the Apple products, do you really show an iPod on the screen and describe it with \"This MP3 player holds a farkton of tunes and runs apps and games!\" without looking like a bunch of complete ninnies?
You might get away with that with the MacBook (\"This laptop computer is easy to use and a crap gaming platform!\"), but that would depend on context, which I don\'t have.
This is nothing more than a hunch, but maybe to even use the item on the show they had to say it by name?
It\'s a good hunch, as that is totally something Apple would do.
Or else what, though? Notwithstanding that Drew is happy to give Apple free publicity in telling the audience about how great the products are, who ever heard of putting an embargo on the show as opposed to the other way round?
Perhaps you are not familiar with Apple, a company who in very large part hangs their success on controlling the message.
That is how they work. If Apple is going to have their project featured on a TV show, any TV show, I imagine they insist on retaining a lot of control as to how their product is presented, and I would bet that extends to product copy.
And Apple does what when TPIR says exactly where they can go? Forbid a game show from giving away their products?Perhaps you are not familiar with Apple, a company who in very large part hangs their success on controlling the message.
That is how they work. If Apple is going to have their project featured on a TV show, any TV show, I imagine they insist on retaining a lot of control as to how their product is presented, and I would bet that extends to product copy.
And Apple does what when TPIR says exactly where they can go? Forbid a game show from giving away their products?
Yes, that is precisely what they do. Apple\'s sales are just fine with or without the Drew Carey Bump.
We run into this fairly often at work. When we feature a game on the Dash, we are effectively giving that game free advertising, so they shouldn\'t care how we do it, yes? And yet, some publishers who shall remain nameless (though if you have a guess as to which publishers I\'m talking about, you\'re probably right) are INCREDIBLY hardassed about approving the images and headline text that we use, to the point of wanting to crop images themselves (which we never let them do, because they invariably fark it up) instead of letting our art people (who know what they are doing) do it.
So while I obviously cannot be certain because I am not part of the TPiR production staff, all I\'m saying is that the likelyhood of Apple flexing their virtual peen in the name of Controlling The Message is very much non-zero, based on past actions.
To my knowledge, there are far fewer prizes sponsored on the show now than ever. However, one of the production values that the current team sees as a benefit is to offer \"cool\" or extravagent prizes to [supposedly] entice more viewers to tune in. This is at the full cost of the production company. If the show is going to spend money to specifically highlight and give away Gucci products even if they are not sponsored, they certainly may as well mention it by name.
I do know that a few years back, the show was literally shopping at the outlets in Cabazon. There was a specific high-end company whose products were being featured on the show, but did not sponsor the prizes and the show was mentioning it by name. They actually received a call from the company asking them to stop promoting their products and stop offering them on the show, as they felt that their items were above the Price is Right gameshow-esque target audience.