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Spidey
Pulpit |
LOS ANGELES, CA – Only days after retracting its unpopular Spider-Man
2 ad campaign with Major League Baseball, Columbia Pictures has set
its advertising sites on the church. In an announcement late Friday, Columbia
executives unveiled plans to place small web decals on the pews and pulpits
of the largest American churches—the same decals that were only
recently the subject of heated debate within the baseball world.
The 12"x12" ads will be placed on the ends of pews and on
the fronts of pulpits for one weekend of services in mid-June. The campaign
includes several megachurches such as Saddleback and Willow Creek Community
Church, but focuses its effort on churches with national TV audiences.
Columbia sources remain tight-lipped about the terms of the deal, but
some industry sources speculate that churches such as Robert Schuller's
Crystal Cathedral and John Hagee's Cornerstone Church may net as
much as $50,000 for their participation.
Just one week ago, Major League Baseball angered a nation of baseball
purists with the announcement of a significant ad campaign that would
place Spider-Man web logos on the bases and in on-deck circles
of every Major League ballpark. A day later, the league changed course,
admitting that the public outcry had been so widespread that to continue
as planned would have been a public relations nightmare. That opened the
door for Columbia to pursue the option to advertise in the church.
Geoffrey Ammer, president of marketing for the Columbia TriStar Motion
Picture Group, expressed some regrets about the change in tack. "We're
somewhat concerned with the timing, summer being a bit of a down time
within our new advertising demographic. But the outcry within baseball,
which is peaking in June, left us without a major sponsor and little time
to act."
But overall, Ammer said, the company is pleased with the new marketing
opportunity, which taps an audience that until the release of The
Passion of the Christ was thought to be relatively un-hip when it
came to the cinema. "If Mel Gibson proved one thing, it's
that today's evangelical is not opposed to some violent content
if the subject matter is good. And we feel our product is definitely up-to-snuff."
The decision has already raised the ire of religious traditionalists,
who argue that the ad campaign impugns Christianity's dignified
history. "I guess it's inevitable, but it's sad," said Eugene
Peterson, pastor and translator of the popular Message version of the
Bible. "I guess I'm old-fashioned. Pastors are already little
more than religious shopkeepers, and this just exposes that fact. The
church should be protected from this. Some may hail this as progress,
but I regret it very much."
The pastors whose churches stand to benefit from the promotion have a
different view, saying they're merely trying to do what's
best for their ministries during a typically dry financial season. "Look,
summers are a financial strain on all churches, with people vacationing
and whatnot," Hagee said. "And at my church, we have a TV
audience of thousands who are on vacation, so it hurts us even more than
average churches. So if I can recoup those losses by placing a few Spider-Man
logos around the building, I'm more than willing to do it.
And besides, it's not as though I'm covering over the cross
or anything."
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