The man behind Super Size Me has made a documentary about product placement – and funded it by featuring a fruit juice. Here, he reveals the murky world of movie sponsorship Two years ago, Morgan Spurlock rang Abercrombie & Fitch to offer them his services as a model. The response wasn’t wholly positive. “Have you looked in the mirror?” the company’s press agent asked. “You’re pale. You’re out of shape. You’re not very good-looking. You have a moustache. You’re going bald.” That offending ‘tache shakes with laughter at the memory. “She broke down every flaw for me. She said I was an ugly person. She was very, very offended by my offer.” So Spurlock – pale skin quickly thickening – returned to his phone book and called more companies hoping to cut a deal; 600 in all, of which he scored with 15. This 2% success rate left him with a “tremendous sense of despair”, a heightened empathy for call centre workers and, finally, a film: POM Wonderful Presents: The Greatest Movie Ever Sold (though sadly the cameras weren’t rolling when Abercrombie slapped him down). An examination of how films are funded by product placement, and paid for in exactly this way, The Greatest Movie is a doddle to flog, especially for such an expert salesman. The crowds at the Sheffield Doc/Fest , where we meet in June, lap up his Barnum-style charm; putty in his light-touch jazz hands. Spurlock is a breath of confident showmanship in a genre not notorious for it, just as The Greatest Movie is light relief amid the tub-thumping and brow-furrowing. It’s more intricately gimmicky than McDonalds-for-a-month experiment Super Size Me (2004), the film that introduced us to Spurlock’s brand of human guinea-piggery. And more tone-appropriate than his second, the bounty-hunting travelogue Where in the World is Osama bin Laden? (2008), the critical mauling of which seemed likely, for a time, to spell the end of his big-screen career (he hasn’t read his press since). The Greatest Movie was dreamed up in January 2009, but it took nine months of ring-rounds before anyone took the bait. “There were countless times when we were just like: fuck, what if nobody comes on board? There was no plan B.” Then, the first handshake: vaguely eco roll-on deodorant Ban. Then Sheetz, the petrol station chain, then a dribble more interest, then the hotel chain Hyatt, and, eventually, the big kill: a headline sponsor, who paid $1m in exchange for their brand running above the title. In fact POM , a pomegranate juice outfit that was 39th on Spurlock’s list of drinks, has more than paid their way. For it’s they who’ve unexpectedly added spice to the mix: since the film’s release, POM’s claims over the cardiovascular and prostate benefits of concerted swigging have been the subject of action by the US Federal Trade Commission , which POM is challenging. (“If I were to drink this for a year,” says Spurlock, “I’d get the greatest erection ever sold .”) What Spurlock wanted was more of this kind of controversy. “We tried to get the shittiest people to give us money. The worst corporations. Gun manufacturers. I thought: we gotta get rifles in the movie, things that actually kill people. I called cigarette companies. I called BP. They wanted nothing to do with it. There was a real ethical conversation to be had about where to draw the line. It’s a shame we couldn’t do it.” What one is left with is a film that worries at the limits of personal integrity. Spurlock now believes the moment art hops into bed with commerce “there’s a 100% chance the content will get corrupted”. For cash-strapped film-makers, he thinks the only route forward is to shoot commercials for cash and then self-fund your documentaries. It’s hardly a new dilemma. “Art has had sponsors for centuries. People would have their work subsidised, whether by the rich or the church, and then take the money and then go off and fight the man on the side. Now I’ve got all these commercial offers flooding in, and the question is: can I take that money and then go and blast the doors open on other types of arena?” To some extent, the dilemma that emerges most pressingly from The Greatest Movie is not one for the artist but the consumer. “Making this film has made me infinitely more aware of how I want to raise my kid,” says Spurlock. “It’s made me much more cognisant of where I want to spend my money. If you wanna live in a box your whole life then maybe you shouldn’t see the movie.” Part of the sell of the film is its interactivity: getting involved with it, in any capacity, is an extension of the experiment itself. When you see it, when you read these words, you’ll be fulfilling some of those obligations (ticket stubs sold, media impressions managed) demanded by the investors. On some level you’re as implicated as those residents of Altoona, Pennsylvania, who took $25,000 to rename their city POM Wonderful Presents: The Greatest Movie Ever Sold, PA for two months this summer. It also raises intriguing teases about to what extent people – in their professional and personal lives – are reliant on their own brand (Spurlock’s is professionally analysed in the hope that’ll match him more closely with potential investors, and comes back as “mindful/playful”). When he asks people on the street to deconstruct their USP, they’re acute and funny; but they don’t take it seriously. Should we? Ought people to have a more accurate sense of commodity value? Spurlock takes a holistic approach. “I think your sense of self should be your commodity value – period. You’re marketing yourself every day based on that self-worth.” Isn’t that different: what you produce, rather than what you are? “But it’s an extension of who you are, of your sense of self. Whether you stand for quality or value or truth.” With Spurlock, of course, the separation of self and occupation is an unusually sticky one. His personality has long been his wares to hawk; right from his first break hosting an MTV dare show in which punters would scoff unsavouries for cash (full jar of mayo = $235, worm burrito = $265). So perhaps it’s natural he tends to overestimate the connection for others. “My father was an entrepreneur,” he says. “And he was all about hard work and saying what you mean and meaning what you say. He never had a contract; if he shook your hand, that was all you’re needed. And that as a person bled into him as a businessman.” Spurlock is the same: an honest, average Joe. But he’s also canny enough to know that being a human guinea pig, no matter how high-falutin’ the experiment, isn’t something you can necessarily keep doing into middle age (he’s 40). Spurlock’s shtick – a consumer superhero who confronts people we all might if we had the gumption – either needs to toughen up to enable him to take on harder targets, or to adapt. The former isn’t going to happen: Spurlock is a natural cheerleader who likes being liked and feels at home in the mainstream (upcoming documentary subjects are the comic convention Comic-Con and sports agents). But that’s not to say he’s not without serious artistic ambition. The goal of all documentarians, he says, is “to get their film into the cinema”. Digital release may ensure an audience, but “is it the best-case scenario for you as a film-maker? Of course not. Is that what you wanted? No.” And Spurlock would, as it happens, like to make the move into fiction – when we chat in June, he talks about “getting his feet wet with a $10m project … of course I would love to do that. You’d know how the story ends, which is just the best thing ever. You would have a finite shoot period. You wouldn’t just have to keep on shooting until you stop.” He enthuses about the Peter Jackson model – going from Heavenly Creatures straight to Lord of the Rings. At the time, it sounded like a pipe dream; since then, details have emerged of Little Green Men, an adaptation of the Christopher Buckley novel about a political talkshow host who is abducted by aliens, on which Spurlock seems to be installed in the director’s chair. It’ll be fascinating to see whether he pulls it off, and without resorting to product placement. Pepto-Bismol Presents: Little Green Men, anyone? Morgan Spurlock Documentary Catherine Shoard guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …It may just sit in the corner, silently feeding you internet, but why can’t it look good while doing it? Asus is one step ahead of us with this one by extending its Black Diamond design to a new range of five more room enhancing products. The baby of the bunch, the RT-N10 LX, stylishly serves up bog standard 802.11n, while the undoubted prom queen is the RT-N66U which brings simultaneous dual band and gigabit speed L/WAN speeds to the packet shifting party. Two more equally svelte models — the RT-N10 LX and RT-N15 — cater for those networking inbetweeners, and finally, for those that accessorize, a dual band USB dongle squeezes in 2×2 MIMO as well as matching perfectly with those new shoes you bought . Asus to launch 5 new routers, moving data never looked so good originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 14 Oct 2011 03:26:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Northern Ireland will be last region to fully switch over to digital television, with process likely to be completed under budget The UK’s analogue TV era will come to an end on 24 October 2012, it has been announced. Eighty years from the first experimental broadcasts, the old five-channel system will be switched off for good. The date will also signal the completion of digital television switchover which started in 2008,. David Scott, the Digital UK chief executive, said: “The analogue era was a defining period for TV but the fully digital age will be even better, with a greater choice of channels for viewers everywhere. “I’m looking forward to October next year when we will have brought the benefits of digital to every corner of the country.” At its conclusion in 2012, inside the timetable set out by the government, more than 15 million new viewers will have been brought into coverage for Freeview services, Digital UK said. Digital UK added it was on course to complete the project at least £53m under budget. The last analogue TV signals will be switched off in Northern Ireland where “virtually all” households will receive the new digital signal “including half a million viewers who cannot receive it now”. The first experimental analogue television broadcasts started in August 1932. Official BBC broadcasting launched in 1936 and the corporation went on to inform and entertain viewers with coverage of landmark events such as the moon landings and classic shows from Nationwide to Morecambe and Wise. The UK’s switchover programme started in 2008. •
Continue reading …Standard & Poor’s has downgraded the eurozone’s fourth largest economy by one notch 8.58am: UBS global chief economist Paul Donovan is not convinced today’s G20 summit will solve the debt crisis. Here are a few highlights from his comments published this morning: The G20 finance ministers gather together to drink champagne, consume foie gras, and spend taxpayers’ money on flights to Paris. There is some chatter of agreeing further assistance for the IMF. Agreement is unlikely now (maybe later). Agreeing substantive policies is not what the G20 is for. Donovan is not pinning his hopes on the European Central Bank’s leadership either: The ECB’s Trichet has demonstrated the dangers of having a non-economist running a central bank by declaring that the ECB should be lender of last resort. Of course the ECB should be lender of last resort. That is the function of a central bank. This is economics 101. (Trichet retires in two weeks). In conclusion, despite Slovakia’s approval of a strengthened European Financial Stability Facility, he feels a solution is some way off: Slovakia has approved EFSF version 2.0. This still does not do the job, however, and we need to reboot and upgrade. Banking recapitalisation is still necessary – helping those countries that can not (or will not in the future) be able to help their banks. 8.45am: Back to UBS, Fitch has downgraded the bank’s rating from A+ to A, and put seven other European and U.S. banks under review, citing stressed economies and financial markets and regulatory reform. Barclays, Bank, BNP Paribas, Credit Suisse Group, Deutsche Bank, Societe Generale, Bank of America, Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs Group have all been put on notice for possible downgrades. Fitch said the cuts would in most cases be one notch, although it could impose two notches in some instances. Michael Hewson, market analyst at CMC Markets, said Europe’s banks would have to take a bigger write down on their sovereign debt holdings than current talk suggests: Today sees the beginning of another G20 finance ministers meeting and they will certainly have a lot to talk about now that Slovakia has finally ratified the EFSF [European Financial Stability Facility] bailout fund changes. Problems still remain and have increased in size since the original July 21st meeting with significant debate about how to recapitalise Europe’s banks as well as increasing the private sector involvement in relation to Greece. There has been talk of haircuts being increased to between 30-50%, a start but still nowhere near big enough. There has also been talk of how to go about making the EFSF bigger in size with widespread disagreement on how to go about this. 8.18am: Good morning and welcome to the live blog with me, Juliette Garside. Today’s focus is on the European debt crisis, with national leaders gathering for the latest G20 talks in Paris, and news of credit rating downgrades for Spain and Switzerland’s UBS bank. The London markets were left unphased by the news, with the FTSE 100 index opening some 10 points higher at 5413. Standard & Poor’s cut Spain’s credit rating this morning, from AA- to AA, sending the euro lower and echoing last week’s move by Fitch. S&P explained its decision to cut the country’s long term rating by pointing to Spain’s high unemployment, tightening credit and high private sector debt. The agency said: Despite signs of resilience in economic performance during 2011, we see heightened risks to Spain’s growth prospects due to high unemployment, tighter financial conditions, the still high level of private sector debt, and the likely economic slowdown in Spain’s main trading partners. S&P is worried that labour market reforms in the eurozone’s fourth largest economy are incomplete, and that there will be further asset deterioration at its banks. The agency now thinks Spain will see economic growth of just 1% in 2012, down from its February forecast of 1.5%, and warns there may be further downgrades to come. We could lower the ratings again if, consistent with our downside scenario, the economy contracts in 2012, Spain’s fiscal position significantly deviates from the government’s budgetary targets, or additional labour market and other growth-enhancing reforms are delayed. European debt crisis Europe Spain G20 UBS Juliette Garside guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Somali Islamist Shebab rebels kidnapped two female Spanish aid workers from Kenya’s Dadaab refugee camp, the third kidnapping of foreigners in just over a month, police said. “Two aid workers of Spanish nationality have been kidnapped by the Shebab, they are working for MSF (Medecins Sans Frontieres),” regional police chief Leo Nyongesa told AFP. Kenya has launched a search operation but the women are reported to have been taken towards the border with war-torn Somalia, where heavy fighting was reported in a town just across the border. “Two women have been kidnapped from Ifo camp, and taken away by people we believe are from Somalia,” said police spokesman Erick Kiraithe. “A driver who was…
Continue reading …The New York Times enters the world of toilet reviews today, but this is no ordinary toilet. It’s the ultra-luxury Numi from Kohler that costs $6,400 and brings hygienic extravagance to a new level. Shaped like a white rhombus, the Numi is controlled with a touch-screen remote that allows…
Continue reading …I saw this video at BreitvartTV. These “radicals” truly need to be put in the back of a truck and driven to a commune in Canada. None of these people are mentally stable let alone employable. Oh, and be sure to go to You Tube and read the comments. I laughed so hard that I ( more ) Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : HillBuzz Discovery Date : 11/10/2011 03:22 Number of articles : 4
Continue reading …Number of first-time buyers drops to lowest level for a year as mortgage lenders freeze out those with small deposits The number of first-time buyers fell in September 2011 to the lowest level in almost a year as a result of mortgage providers approving fewer loans for borrowers with small deposits, according to the latest e.surv mortgage monitor. Mortgage approvals in the cheapest price bracket (up to £250,000, which is considered typical first-timer property) accounted for only 22% of the total market in September, the lowest since November 2010 and well down on the 30% seen in 2006 when the housing market was near its peak. Approvals for mortgages with a deposit of 25% or under fell to their lowest number since February, at 33.5% of all loans approved for purchase, compared with 43.2% in September 2007 The average loan-to-value in the cheapest price bracket fell to 66% – far below the 76% LTV seen in September 2006, as borrowers found it harder to secure mortgages with a smaller deposit. E.surv said the decline in lower-income buyers fuelled a 1.7% total fall in mortgage purchase approvals in September, to 51,524, down from 52,410 in August. But approvals on homes in all price brackets above £250,000 remained steady. Richard Sexton, business development director of e.surv , said: “With the economy in peril from every angle, lenders are playing it safe and training their sights on wealthier borrowers. But for those who can access mortgage finance, life is particularly sweet. “Lenders are falling over themselves trying to offer the lowest fixed-rate deals, and the good news is that they look odds-on to remain particularly cheap for the foreseeable future. But that won’t be of much comfort to first-time buyers who can’t build the big deposit required to access these rates.” Matt Griffiths of first-time buyer campaign website PricedOut.org.uk agreed that conditions were leading to a widening gap between homeowners and prospective buyers. He said: “For those blessed with home ownership, very low bank rates are giving large cash windfalls whilst saving capital values from sharp falls. But for those not on the ladder the financial storm is hitting their ability to get a mortgage whilst rental inflation hits their ability to save.” The research came as lender HSBC announced it intended to make £350m of lending available to borrowers with small deposits. Separate research from LSL Property Services showed a 0.3% fall in house prices in September. David Newnes, director of LSL, said the modest summer recovery in the housing market “came to an abrupt end in September”. He added: “There are still serious barriers to a sustained property market recovery. Outside London, prices are falling throughout England and Wales and this has contributed to a fall in the average house price.” First-time buyers Property Mortgages Mortgage lending figures Housing market Real estate Mark King guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Two storm systems left 29 people dead and forced tens of thousands from their homes as heavy rains battered Central America and Mexico’s Pacific coast, officials said. Central America alone accounted for 24 of those dead and nearly 60,000 people made homeless by the storms, according to local authorities and emergency services. Another five people were killed in Mexico, where Hurricane Jova’s torrential rains forced at least 4,000 people to leave their homes. The storms triggered heavy flooding, blocked roads, and caused electricity outages and mudslides. Many homes were destroyed. In hard-hit Guatemala, where 15 people died and over 52,000 were forced from their homes, torrential rains…
Continue reading …No, your eyes don’t deceive you — Box is offering 50GBs of free storage inside its cloud for iOS users — just like it did for TouchPad owners back in June. Anyone who downloads the latest version of Box’s app for iPad and iPhone will receive their massive lot for data storage after registering a personal account (existing accounts can join in on the fun as well). To make better use of that extra space, Box will also be bumping upload capacity from 25MB to 100MB per file and baking in AirPlay support. Look, Box is obviously skitching on iCloud’s tail, but it sure seems like a crazy good deal considering that space is yours “forever.” The promotion will last for 50 days, officially starting at 12AM on October 14th — although, we’re already seeing the update on our end. Full details in the source link. Box rides on iCloud’s coattails, offers 50GB of free cloud storage to iOS users originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 13 Oct 2011 22:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
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