The London
Olympics are well underway and so far, generally, Britain has won plaudits for
its running of the Games. But there has been some disquiet about the role of
big corporate sponsors.
The London
2012 opening ceremony last Friday was heralded as a triumph around the world,
even earning the distinction from Germany's tabloid Bild as being the
"coolest show ever." Meanwhile, the French daily Liberation said the
performance was full of "humor and unbridled imagination," while Le
Parisien called it "magnificent, inventive and offbeat."
And,
barring a few troubles, the Games also seem to be going smoothly so far. The
media have largely focussed on the sporting stories: From mounting medal tallies,
to doping controversies and astonishing stories of athletic prowess.
Embarrassing: Empty seats in a number of venues |
But there
have been a few glitches, notably the embarrassing images of empty seats at a
number of venues, including the gymnastics and the aquatics center - despite
members of the public being told the events were sold out.
To cover up
the problem, troops and students were brought in to fill up the gaps, and the
organizers announced that more tickets would be made available to the public on
a day-by-day basis.
Corporate
sponsors
But within
the country itself, there is a deeper sense of unease about the role of big
corporate sponsors in the Games.
There have
been complaints about global giants like Coca Cola and McDonald's. Between them,
eleven giant corporate sponsors have paid more than a billion dollars for the
exclusive use of the Olympic brand. But critics say that exclusivity has been
enforced in a heavy-handed manner, quite alien to the Olympic spirit.
McDonald's has opened a huge restaurant in the Olympic Park |
The Games
have even attracted the attention of the American anti-consumerist preacher and
comedian, Reverend Billy Talen, who chanted "Get the corporations out of
the Olympics please! The Olympics are corrupt!" on the streets of London.
His comic
ravings resonate with some Brits. Julian Cheyne has campaigned against the
London Olympics.
"This
is large corporations who profit," Cheyne told DW. "Large
corporations are the sponsors. Small people are left aside."
And, he
says, small businesses who've tried to tap into the Olympic spirit have been
hammered. A butcher was threatened with a $30,000 fine. His crime was to hang
five sausages in the shape of Olympic rings in his shop window. And florist,
Lisa Cross, was also threatened for her Olympic flower arrangement, complete
with cardboard torch.
"Everybody
said, 'What a wonderful display'! At the end of the day we're only supporting
Team GB so what are we doing wrong? I can't see what I've done wrong."
Coca Cola is one of 11 official sponsors |
Staff at
the Spectator Magazine agree with her. They're outraged by what they see as
heavy-handed brand policing by the Olympic authorities.
"I
think they're absurd," says assistant editor Freddy Gray. "They're
ruining their own brand by excessively protecting it."
Ambush
marketing
But the
Olympic authorities have the law on their side. Olympic brand infringement is a
criminal offence. And non-sponsors are forbidden by law to advertise anywhere
near Olympic facilities. You could argue that a non-sponsoring company is
partly to blame:
Ambush
marketing by the US sportswear giant Nike at the Atlanta Games traumatized
Olympic officials and their sponsors. Mark James is a law lecturer at Salford
University:
"Nike
effectively bought up all of the advertising space in and around the centre so
they were able to get massive media coverage despite not being the official
sponsors of that particular Games," he explains.
The opening ceremony was heralded as a triumph |
Which might
explain the authorities' desire to prevent non-sponsors from stealing the
Olympic limelight. But what if someone swigging a non-sponsoring Pepsi wanders
into the advertising exclusion zone? And would someone wearing a Microsoft
T-shirt be let into the Olympic Park? A question for Britain's Olympic Minister
Hugh Robertson:
"He or
she will be allowed into the Park," he tells us. "They will only not
be allowed into the Park if they come as part of a group and an individual's
clothing turns into ambush marketing."
Small
business owners
But while
Coke may be nervous about a Pepsi ambush, Helen Day is wondering why the
Olympic authorities have been bothering her. She runs a small entertainment
agency with a troupe of acrobats on her books. When she published photograph of
the girls draped inside five aerial rings, and offered their services for
Olympic themed parties she was slapped with a ban.
"I
think they've created a real negativity among small business owners about the
Olympics which is a real shame because it should be something we're
celebrating, something we're getting behind. And after all it is something our
taxes have paid for," says Day.
Baiting the
Olympic authorities and their sponsors could even turn into a national sport. A
leading British wine merchant has become so exasperated by the Olympic
censorship it's offered steep discounts to customers who can prove they've
bought products from … non-sponsors.
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