MasterCard to Nader: 'Priceless' campaign ads could prove costly
By The Associated Press
08.18.00
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| Green Party presidential candidate Ralph Nader holds a
news conference yesterday in Washington, D.C., to respond to a $5 million
lawsuit filed against him. MasterCard has accused him of ripping off its
well-known "Priceless" ad campaign in his new campaign
commercials. |
WASHINGTON Ralph Nader has a message for MasterCard: lighten
up.
The credit card company filed a $5 million lawsuit Aug. 16 against
Nader, accusing him of ripping off MasterCard's well-known
"Priceless" advertising campaign in a new TV ad for the Green Party
presidential candidate.
Nader defended the ad yesterday, calling the lawsuit
"foolish." He said MasterCard needs to "lighten up" and
recognize that his ad is a legally acceptable parody.
"MasterCard is taking itself a little too seriously and, in
typical corporate style, is trying not only to dominate the credit card
industry ... but also wishes to control the arena of free speech and the free
flow of creative ideas in the political arena," Nader said at a press
conference.
MasterCard International Inc. feels otherwise.
"We feel we have one of the most successful advertising
campaigns, period, and we will always do whatever it takes to protect this
campaign," said Chris O'Neill, vice president of global marketing
communications for Purchase, N.Y.-based MasterCard.
MasterCard filed its lawsuit in federal court in Manhattan, seeking an
order barring Nader from running the ad. O'Neill said the company brought the
suit after a week of fruitless conversations with the Nader campaign.
The Nader ad, which began airing Aug. 6 in San Francisco and Los
Angeles, was scheduled to run only through yesterday. The campaign plans to
continue to show the ad on its Web site
indefinitely, Nader said.
MasterCard's ads feature sentimental episodes of families together at
places including a beach or baseball game, assigning monetary values to various
activities before coming up with an activity that is "priceless." The
ads conclude: "There are some things in life money can't buy. For
everything else, there's MasterCard."
The Nader ad adopts a nearly identical format to focus attention on
the role of political contributions in this year's presidential campaign. The
ad opens with video clips of Texas Gov. George W. Bush and Vice President Al
Gore, as an announcer intones: "Grilled tenderloin for fund-raiser: $1,000
a plate. Campaign ads filled with half-truths: $10 million. Promises to special
interest groups: over $10 billion."
"Finding out the truth: Priceless," the announcer concludes.
"There are some things money can't buy. Without Ralph Nader in the
presidential debates, the truth will come in last."
MasterCard sued HBO last year after the cable television network ran
an ad for its comedy series "Arliss" that mirrored the
"Priceless" ads. That suit is still in litigation and HBO is no
longer running the ad, O'Neill said.
Update
Federal judge refuses to block 'Priceless' parody ads
MasterCard had asked court to temporarily stop Ralph Nader's campaign commercials mimicking company's advertisements.
09.14.00
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