Knight2000 wrote:
The laws and regulations are being examined and there's a strong possibility that they're gonna
allow this kinda advertising to pass, as well as other stuff where companies put their logos
on screen (a bit like a logo of the channel you're watching appears in the corner).
Let me start my response by first quoting Sue, from the
Knight Of The Zodiac episode thread:
Sue wrote:
I've never been one to complain about the advertising, but if it starts to dictate how
a writer has to write the script -then it is really taking away from the show, and
probably from the writers creative process. Yes yes Ford flex, new Mustang
whoop-de-do. It kinda made KITT look really old after they opened those
doors and revealed him hiding there in a cloud of his own imagined smog.
Cough cough, some futuristic car you turned out to be buddy.
If the show was good on its own accord it would have advertisers lining up no matter
what they wrote. But if it's not.. and Fords footing the bill, than Fords going to be
calling the shots. I really wish that Ford and NBC would just empower the writers
and let them find their own self confidence and creativity again.
Well, that pretty much sums up the basis of this thread and why our broadcast regulator might
still put the kybosh on new KR being shown in the UK, even with certain edits being applied.
Ford may be the commercial paymasters of this new incarnation of KR, but if they're able to
have this amount of input in the storylines, curtailing the creativity of the writers, then
they seriously have way too much undue prominence over the entire show.
(At least with Pontiac and the original KR series, it went entirely in the opposite direction!)
There may be plans afoot to relax the way product placement on TV is handled over here for
the not too distant future, but I'm sure any changes to the current rules will ensure that any
extra product placement is likely to be considerably more subtle than Ford on new KR.
As it stands right now, if a show was made for broadcast on any UK commercial TV channel
had as much creative interference from the sponsor as Ford have over new KR, the show
would simply not be allowed to be broadcast, full stop. If, despite that, the show was
shown anyway, the channel would be severely reprimanded or even fined by Ofcom.