CHICAGO, April 12, 2006

New 'Stealth' TV Ads Assailed

Digital Insertion Of Products Into Shows After They're Shot Is Hot

  • Play CBS Video Video Digital Product Placement

    Product placement seems to be more important than ever, as DVRs allow viewers zip past commercials. Cynthia Bowers reports on how new technology is circumventing such obstacles.

    • Gary Ruskin of the group Commercial Alert

      Gary Ruskin of the group Commercial Alert  (CBS/The Early Show)

    • David Brenner, founder of digital product placement pioneer Marathon Ventures

      David Brenner, founder of digital product placement pioneer Marathon Ventures  (CBS/The Early Show)

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Pointing to a scene from the show "Yes, Dear," Brenner says, "If you look at all the products on the table … it would be impossible to tell which is real and which has been digitally inserted, and that's the whole idea."

Advertisers are already spending billions of dollars on product placement, Bowers points out, and this technology is giving them flexibility unheard of in the past: "Say a scene unfolded in a kitchen, you can add a food product, or in the bathroom, why not a can of shaving cream?"

Techies are working on trying to digitally place even bigger ticket items, such as refrigerators and cars.

As she spoke, those types of products suddenly popped up on what was the empty table in front of her.

"Flexibility is definitely key," observes media manager Elizabeth Herbst-Brady. "I don't have to know three to four months in advance that I want to do something. I can do it much more in real time, so I can take advantage and give my client more flexibility. … It's really a way of fully taking advantage of product placement opportunities, which is something that clients continue to want to use."

Networks and producers can now sell the very same space to multiple sponsors, says Brenner: "One product (could be inserted) in for the first run on network. Every show is rerun, so now you can put a second product in. When the show goes into syndication, you could now put an additional product in, or a different product in for syndication, and if the show goes into a box set on DVD, you can now offer another opportunity for somebody to be in the DVD box set."

But the thought of product placement becoming easier, and potentially more pervasive, has some critics howling.

"People, when they see an ad that's clearly an ad, they understand that there's persuasive intent by a corporation that's trying to propagandize to them, and so they're on their guard," says Gary Ruskin of the group Commercial Alert. "But, where there's product placement, people aren't on their guard. And that's exactly why the advertising industry likes product placement so much. It's deceptive advertising, it's dishonest advertising, it sneaks by our critical faculties and plants its messages in our brains when we are paying less attention."

For advertisers, Bowers says, that's exactly the point: to send you a message without your even knowing it, using a product that's not really there, in a sort of "stealth ad." But product placement works, so expect it to be around, even virtually, for a long time.


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