http://apnews.myway.com/article/20040505/D82CMJ380.html

Spider-Man is coming to a base near you. In the latest example of a
sponsor's stamp on the sports world, ads for the movie "Spider-Man 2"
will be placed atop bases at 15 major league ballparks during games
from June 11-13.
The promotion, announced Wednesday, is part of baseball's pitch to
appeal to younger fans - and make money along the way.

"This was a unique chance to combine what is a sort of a universally
popular character and our broad fan base, including the youth market
we're trying to reach out to," said Bob DuPuy, baseball's chief
operating officer. "It doesn't impact the play or performance of the
game."

While commemorative logos have been on bases for special events such
as the All-Star game or World Series, the Hall of Fame knew of no
other commercial ads on bases, spokesman Jeff Idelson said.

Nowadays, ads can show up just about anywhere in sports.

Telecasts of major league and college football games, for example,
include virtual ads visible just to TV viewers. College football bowl
games are named for advertisers. Boxers' backs bear stenciled ads.
Just last week, a court ruled that Kentucky Derby jockeys could wear
sponsors' patches on their uniforms.

"I guess it's inevitable, but it's sad," said Fay Vincent, a former
baseball commissioner and former president of Columbia Pictures, which
is releasing "Spider-Man 2."

"I'm old-fashioned. I'm a romanticist. I think the bases should be
protected from this. I feel the same way I do when I see jockeys wears
ads: Maybe this is progress, but there's something in me that regrets
it very much," he added.

The movie promotion has been in the works for more than a year and
will include ad buys and ballpark events, such as giving masks to
fans, said Jacqueline Parkes, baseball's senior vice president for
marketing and advertising.

The ads, about 4-by-4-inches with a red background and yellow webbing,
won't appear on home plate.

"Spider-Man 2" opens June 30, and the weekend in early June was picked
because it is during interleague play, which draws higher attendance
than usual.

"We need to reach out to a younger demographic to bring them to the
ballpark," Parkes said. "They are looking for nontraditional
breakthrough ways to convey 'Spider-Man' messaging. ... It's the
future of how we generate excitement inside the stadium and about the
game itself."

Baseball will receive about $3.6 million in a deal negotiated by Major
League Baseball Properties with Marvel Studios and Columbia Pictures,
a division of Sony Inc., a high-ranking baseball executive said on
condition of anonymity.

The New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox will get more than $100,000
each, one team executive said, also on condition of anonymity. Most of
the other 13 teams playing at home that weekend will get about $50,000
apiece, the team executive said.

Parkes said the amount a team receives depends on the level of its
participation. Geoffrey Ammer, president of marketing for the Columbia
TriStar Motion Picture Group, was not immediately available for
comment, spokesman Steve Elzer said.

Ralph Nader, a presidential candidate and consumer advocate,
criticized the deal. He wrote Tuesday to baseball commissioner Bud
Selig, denouncing the decision to have ads on uniforms during the
season-opening series in March between the Yankees and Tampa Bay Devil
Rays in Tokyo.

"It's gotten beyond grotesque," Nader said. "The fans have to revolt
here. Otherwise, they'll be looking at advertisements between
advertisements."

Gary Ruskin, executive director of Commercial Alert, called for
baseball fans to boycott Sony products. Nader is the chair of the
organization's advisory board.

In separate promotions, the bases also will feature pink ribbons
Sunday as part of a Mother's Day promotion to raise breast-cancer
awareness, and they will have blue ribbons on Father's Day, June 20,
to raise prostate-cancer awareness.

John Hirschbeck, head of the World Umpires Association, said the ads
won't make it harder for umpires to make calls at the bases. And it
wouldn't bother him if umpires' uniforms had ads - as long as they
share the profit.

"We've got it on jockeys' pants. Why not?" he said.

Vincent, brought into baseball by commissioner A. Bartlett Giamatti,
wondered how his friend would have reacted. Giamatti, who died in
1989, rhapsodized about baseball is essays such as "The Green Fields
of the Mind," in which he referred to second base as a "jagged rock"
in the middle of the field.

"Wherever he is, Bart is spinning," Vincent said. "It's a good thing
he's not around."




xponent

Travesty Maru

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