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U.K.
Shuts Out Product Placement
Steve Clarke
Variety
June 11, 2008
The U.K. media
minister has attacked product placement in TV shows and
said he will not allow the practice on British
broadcasters even though it has been approved by the
European Union.
The news is likely to infuriate TV companies, including
beleaguered terrestrial giant ITV, which are all trying
to find additional revenue streams as new media
continues to make inroads into traditional advertising.
Andy Burnham, secretary of state at the Dept. of
Culture, Media and Sport since January, dropped his
bombshell Wednesday in his first big policy speech on
broadcasting.
He said product placement would undermine the status
that British TV enjoys internationally and “contaminate”
programs.
He added, “There is a risk that, at the very moment when
television needs to do all it can to show it can be
trusted, that we elide the distinction between programs
and adverts,” referring to the phone-in quiz scandals
that rocked all British terrestrial webs last year.
“As a viewer, I don’t want to feel the script has been
written by the commercial marketing director,” he added.
“British programming has an integrity that is revered
around the world, and I don’t think we should put that
hard-won reputation up for sale.”
Last week, ITV topper Rupert Howell, in a speech about
the new economics of TV, eagerly anticipated a time when
U.K. television would be allowed to follow the U.S.
example and use product placement.
Howell said it was vital to find new revenue streams
soon and that product placement would be an important
source of coin.
He said: “If we do it badly, people will switch off or
switch over. We have to do it well. It will not be big,
but it will be valuable.” |
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