Every Nook and Cranny
By Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman

We've heard it said that commercialism will keep expanding its frontiers
until every boundary has been smashed and non-commercial values are
completely extinguished.

Let's now admit that we are rapidly approaching that point.

We are friends with a seven-year-old, who has been sheltered to a large
degree from the ravages of commercialism, who likes baseball, and who
likes to sing that American classic "Take me out to the Ballgame."

We were driving him to see a major league ballgame the other day, running
late, listening to the first inning on the radio, when a jingle for an
oil company came on -- "Take me Out to Sunoco."

"What's Sunoco?" the seven-year old asked.

"Sun Oil Company," we said in shock.

Slowly, baseball has been giving in to the creep of commercial culture. Of
course, for years, ads have played a dominant role at the ballparks. But
now things are getting out of control.

Every time the New York Yankees turn a double play, the Yankees
play-by-play announcers are required, by contract, to say "There's Another
Jiffy Lube Double Play." When Yankee skipper Joe Torre pulls the starting
pitcher and calls for a relief pitcher, the Yankees announcers must say
there's a "Geico Direct Call to the Bullpen." And so on.

And now, the forces of commercialism have grabbed onto one of baseball's
all-time heroes, The Ironman, Lou Gehrig.

Alcatel, the French telecommunications firm that is using Martin Luther
King's "I Have a Dream" speech in national television and print ads, has
obtained the rights to Gehrig's famous 1939 farewell speech at Yankee
Stadium.

In that speech, despite having a fatal disease that bears his name --
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis -- Gehrig told the Yankee stadium crowd on
that day he considered himself "the luckiest man on the face of the
Earth."

We called up Brian Murphy, the U.S. spokesperson for Alcatel and asked him
about the Gehrig ad. He said that decision on whether to run the ad would
be made with a few weeks.

We made the point that Dr. King was not about commercialism and would
never have allowed his name to be used for commercial purposes.

We reminded Murphy that there has been strong criticism from the civil
rights community over the use of Dr. King to sell the French company's
telephone equipment.

On the Today Show last month, Julian Bond, chairman of the NAACP and a
colleague of Dr. King's, ripped into Alcatel.

"It just seems to me that some things ought to be sacrosanct," Bond said.
"Some things ought not be commercialized. Martin Luther King is one of
those icons of the movement. This just strikes me as leading us further
and further down a dangerous path. I can imagine some day seeing Franklin
Roosevelt saying, 'We have nothing to fear but headache pain,' or John F.
Kennedy saying, 'Ask not what you can do for your country, but what you
could do for Country Ham.' It just strikes me as a further intrusion of
commercialism into some of the -- one of the most important icons of the
20th century."

Murphy admitted that the company has received "mixed reactions" to the
King, but defended the company's course, reminding us that the King estate
was paid for the rights to the "I Have a Dream" speech.

How much? we asked.

"That's proprietary information," he said.

"We worked with the King Foundation, the King estate throughout the
process, they approved the King ad -- all along we wanted to make sure we
were honoring Dr. King and we feel we did," Murphy said. "We believe we
did the right thing."

But what about the fact that Dr. King would never have allowed such a
thing, that he was disappointed that our country had failed "to deal
positively and forthrightly with the triple evils of racism, extreme
materialism and militarism."

"I don't know the man," Murphy blurted out.

Clearly you don't.


Russell Mokhiber is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Corporate Crime
Reporter. Robert Weissman is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based
Multinational Monitor. They are co-authors of Corporate Predators: The
Hunt for MegaProfits and the Attack on Democracy (Monroe, Maine: Common
Courage Press, 1999).

(c) Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman

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