Archive for the ‘Public Relations’ Category

Protecting Movie Industry Dogs

Wednesday, June 13th, 2007

Even the movie industry’s dogs need protection from pirates.  No, counterfeiters aren’t keeping their DVD burners going day and night for dogs like Gigli, The Island, Zodiac or Basic Instinct 2. 

It’s the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) adorable black Labradors, Flo and Lucky, that need protecting.  Flo and Lucky have the amazing (some might say unbelievable) ability to sniff out the polycarbonate chemicals used in making pirated DVDs (as well as all other kinds of DVD copies.) 

So the always-creditable New Straits Times reports that Malaysian pirates are protecting their lairs and wares from the noble chocolate Labs with aggressive bulldogs.   

Peddlers have come up with another 'ingenious' idea to keep Lucky and Flo away from the illegal DVD stocks - by putting up 'Beware dog' warning signs as Labrador Retrievers are thought to be vulnerable against aggressive breeds.

Undeterred, the pair of public relations dogs have allegedly helped bust over one million pirated DVDs. 

Lucky and Flo sniff at DVD pirates

Seinfeld Scores With Publicity Stunt

Thursday, May 31st, 2007

Millions of dollars are spent on advertising, but a good publicity stunt gets attention for much less.  All it requires is clear thought and the creativity to come up with a great stunt that won’t damage your brand.

Sure, you can spend a lot of money, as did the Bee Movie producers who put Jerry Seinfeld in a bee costume and flew him down a 9-story-high wire to promote the film at Cannes. 

Jerry Seinfeld managed to rise above the competition in the hucksters' haven of Cannes yesterday. He was promoting his animated film,

But timing and chutzpah can charm the press at low cost.  Recently, tenant activists ambushed their landlord, Professor Eric Sussman, at a class he was teaching at UCLA.  They presented him with a ceramic pig for raising their rents.   The stunt resulted in an LA Times story and coverage from Long Beach to San Jose, for the cost of a bus for the tenants and ten bucks for the piggy bank. 

In 1999, FHM Magazine set a publicity stunt standard by projecting a 60-foot naked image of starlet Gail Porter on the side of the British House of Parliament.

E-Mail to End the Face-to-Face Interview?

Thursday, May 24th, 2007

In a recent column, Howard Kurtz raised the suggestion that the face-to-face interview is essentially dead.

 ”In the digital age, some executives and commentators are saying they will respond only by e-mail, which allows them to post the entire exchange if they feel they have been misrepresented, truncated or otherwise disrespected. And some go further, saying, You want to know what I think? Read my blog.

Jason Calcanis, chief executive of Weblogs Inc., says on his blog that “journalists have been burning subjects for so long with paraphrased quotes, half quotes, and misquotes that I think a lot of folks (especially ones who don’t need the press) are taking an email only interview policy.”

Veteran magazine editor Jeff Jarvis adds at his BuzzMachine blog: “Are interviews about information or gotcha moments? . . . Isn’t it better to get considered, complete answers?”

There’s a lot of food for thought here from both a journalistic and a media training perspective.  How do you verify who you’re actually ‘talking’ to?  If physical description is important, how do you know the 53 year-old woman you’re talking to isn’t a spoofing 15-year old boy?

Creative spellers, the less educated and non-native English writers may look dumb in an email exchange, unless reporters “clean up” their quotes, a long and dishonorable journalistic tradition.  And far from any control advantage, the spokesperson may be actually be at a disadvantage by putting thoughts in writing he could more easily back away from in a verbal interview.

For public relations pros, often acutely aware of how little control they actually have over their message, email interviews pose another control challenge.  If you’re aware of an email interview, will you hover over someone’s shoulder or watch/jump in on another screen?  More importantly, anyone in a corporation or government structure with an email address can now be subject to an email query from the press which becomes an interview.  People want to be helpful, but putting their own answers in writing without the knowledge or approval of management and public relations staff can be disasterous.

Certainly, as news organizations ruthless trim staffs, the do-more-with-less pressure means journalists will be reluctant to leave the office for even the most critical face-to-face, so phoners and email ‘interviews’ will become even more important.  (Smart publicists will continue to push for press tours that bring their spokesperson and product into the office and into the journalist’s face.)

Face-to-face interviews will continue in many settings, such as all kinds of television (no one wants to read email off another screen or have to hear the reporter’s deadly voice-over) trade shows and conferences, press tours, investigative reporting (when the reporter actually leaves his office to track down a story) and for politicians and others who need to show sincerity and thus, as Calcanis puts it, “need the press.”

But email interviews are perilously close to pure public relations opportunies.  I recently sold an international airline magazine on my doing a story on a Japanese company’s innovative female CEO, a phenomenon even more unusual in Japan than here.  I’d met the woman and spoken with her briefly.

But the company publicist told me she was uncomfortable communicating in English and would only agree to do an email interview.  I initially refused, concerned I wouldn’t know who was on the other end of the line and that I would be getting canned answers crafted by the publicist.  I wanted to do a face-to-face, or at least a phone interview, because as Kurtz says, “When you see someone’s expressions or listen to someone’s voice, you get a sense of the person that words on a screen lack.”

We went back and forth for a couple of weeks, until it all blew up when the CEO resigned, with my story departing with her.

From the SF Chronicle to Chrysler: Dislocation at Internet Speed

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2007

The San Francisco Chronicle is making one of the biggest newsroom cuts yet; 25%, writes a Chronicle reporter(!)  Eighty reporters, photographers, copy editors and others will be laid off.

“Analysts predicted the reductions at The Chronicle could have repercussions for readers. While an increasing number of people get news from online aggregators such as Google News and Yahoo, those stories are most often originally reported by print journalists. “

Then there’s the news website in Pasadena, that has unrepentently (and to great publicity) outsourced its city council coverage to India to reporters paid $7500 a year.

While I have sympathy for those cutback or outsourced, I’m not going to cry crocodile tears.  As my Dad told me more than 30 years ago, you’ll never see pro-labor sentiment in a newspaper because they’re an employer.  As the last person I know who owns three American cars, (a Ford, a Lincoln and a Jeep) where were these people and their publications in terms of supporting U.S. industries?

Still, it’s tough times, and for a communications person, the whirling scythe dumps more competitors into the pool.

Ringmaster Richard Parsons Tames Time Warner Crowd

Tuesday, May 22nd, 2007

On May 17  I attended the Time Warner annual meeting in Burbank.   CEO Richard Parsons gave a presentation, told us “we toil on your behalf” and said after years of “going sideways, we finally got some movement in the stock.”  He pointed to the board of directors, “I work for them, they work for you.”

He went over numbers and showed graphics like InStyle with Haile Berry, Bugs Bunny and CNN with Anderson Cooper, adding ”I’d like to salute publicly our journalists who put themselves in harm’s way.”

Befitting the Warner Brothers location, he showed a pair of film clips.  The latest Harry Potter looked vivid and great, while the new Hairspray left me wondering if John Travolta (in drag as the mom) has a speech impediment.  Parsons noted the studio won 10 Oscars in 2007, but I don’t see Travolta finally getting his for this.  Nonetheless, Parsons urged the audience to see the films “early and often.”

“Can old media exist in a digital world?” is the challenge for content creators, according to Parsons, and is something a writer like myself  struggles with every day.  “We’re in the content creation business; ink on paper, television, video.  Our challenge is to move our company into digital, whether you own it, rent it, watch it on an iPOD.”

Parsons is unflappable, as befits a man who says he’s a big fan of Happy Feet.  He also has a good sense of humor, staying calm while noted corporate gadfly John Chevvedden talked about Parson’s high ($22 million) compensation.  When another stockholder admonished Parsons for selling Google years ago, he said, “We could have done better, but no one has ever gone broke taking a profit.”

What’s Time Warner all about?  Parsons put it this way:

1. Make money for our shareholders.

2. Do some good in the world.

3. Have some fun doing it. 

From a media training point of view, couldn’t have said it better myself.

Rare Reversal: Editor in, Publisher out

Thursday, May 10th, 2007

In a rare reversal, management at IDG (publishers of PC World) have kicked the CEO/publisher upstairs and brought back editor Harry McCracken.  He had resigned over editorial independence issues when a story, “Ten Things We Hate About Apple,” was killed by the CEO for fear of offending same.

As IDG finally realized, at the end of the day, a magazine is a lot like a person; ultimately, all you’ve got is your reputation. 

Paris Hilton Brain Trust Reunited

Tuesday, May 8th, 2007

Like a moth to a flame (or a dog revisiting its breakfast) publicist Elliott Mintz has re-upped for the Paris Hilton campaign.  (Remember, in just 9 years Paris will be eligible to run for President of the United States!)

Mintz, 62, took the blame (and was fired)  for supposedly counseling Paris that she could drive for work after her license was suspended, although the judge didn’t believe him.  He “wouldn’t elaborate on why he reunited with Hilton.” 

He’s probably paid decently, and working with the “idiot savant” heiress spotlights his public relations abilities, which can attract more business.  But I don’t think that’s why Mintz, who’s also represented John Lennon and Bob Dylan, is willing to repeatedly take the fall for her. 

Very simply, he sees she’s in trouble and he wants to help her.

Paris Hilton Takes Responsibility—Not

Monday, May 7th, 2007

Paris fired her long-suffering publicist Elliott Mintz over the weekend.  No doubt her DUI-related sentencing was all his fault. 

 

Usually, the best media strategy is to and try to move forward.  But unlike Prison Break star Lane Garrison, Hilton blames others for her conviction, saying that Mintz had told her she was permitted to drive for work-related reasons.

For his part, Mintz took the high road.  “I have nothing but love and respect for Paris and her family. Paris is a wonderful person and does not deserve the punishment that was handed down by the court. I only wish her my best.”

Mintz’ public relations job description, apparently, was not only to keep her in the media spotlight, but to keep her out of jail. Now she’ll have to find someone else to clean up after her.

Spiderman 3 Pirates Nabbed by Flo and Lucky

Friday, April 27th, 2007

Even though the first Spiderman 3 DVDs were fakes, the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) has a serious issue on its hands.  Nine out of every 10 DVDs sold in China is an illegal copy.  But MPAA spokesman Dan Glickman isn’t the most charismatic and Jack Valenti has passed on  What to do?

Put Flo and Lucky on the case!

 Lucky and Flo sniff at DVD pirates

Flo and Lucky are the silent spokesdogs of the MPAA, deployed throughout Asia to literally ’sniff out’ pirated movies and games.  The heroic dogs, trained to detect polycarbonate, even put a stop to a stash of child pornography.  No wonder the pirates of Malaysia have put a bounty on their heads.

You don’t have to believe a word of it.  It’s still a brilliant PR gambit by the MPAA, as people care much more about chocolate Labs than camcorder-wielding movie pirates or bloated movie moguls.

Tom Cruise and the Death of the 3-Source Story

Thursday, April 26th, 2007

Journalists are taught that balanced reporting and multiple voices are important.  An accepted way to achieve both is with the three-source story.  Whether you blame staff cuts, star power or another explanation, such balance may be a thing of the past.  Witness the following AP story which ran in the Los Angeles Times of April 20, 2007, P. E18 and on the Web.

 Cruise assists 9/11 Workers

From the Associated Press, April 20, 2007

Tom Cruise’s latest effort isn’t for the big screen. It’s for the New York police officers, firefighters and paramedics of Sept. 11.

Cruise was to appear Thursday at a private dinner in Manhattan to raise money for the New York Rescue Workers Detoxification Project, a program he co-founded in 2002.

The program, based on principles developed by Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard, offers free treatment to emergency workers who suffer breathing difficulties and other health problems stemming from exposure to toxins at ground zero after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

The program has treated 785 workers since its inception, said Director Jim Woodworth. Each worker is given vitamins and nutritional counseling and participates in daily exercise and sauna sessions.

“We wouldn’t be here if it wasn’t for Tom,” Woodworth said.

Quick quiz: how many sources do you see?  How many voices do you get? Is this a press release, or a news article?

Believe it or not, both Fox News and US Magazine took the same material and delivered a much more .  Money quote: “‘This is just hocus-pocus,’ said Dr. Bob Hoffman of the New York City Poison Control Center.”