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			<title><![CDATA[The Good And The Bad Of Recent Sci Fi Product Placement]]></title>
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				<a class="autolink" title="Click here to read more posts tagged PRODUCT PLACEMENT" title="Click here to read more posts tagged PRODUCT PLACEMENT" href="http://io9.com/tag/product-placement/">Product placement</a> <a href="http://io9.com/5061426/the-history-of-product-placement-in-science-fiction">has always been a huge part of science fiction</a>, because it's just not the future without big-name brands. But in the last couple years, it's gotten way out of hand. Just check out our list of recent examples.				<a href="http://io9.com/5295728/the-good-and-the-bad-of-recent-sci-fi-product-placement" title="Click here to read more about The Good And The Bad Of Recent Sci Fi Product Placement">More&nbsp;&raquo;</a>
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			<pubDate><![CDATA[Thu, 18 Jun 2009 14:36:27 PDT]]></pubDate>
			<dc:creator><![CDATA[StephenGoldmeier]]></dc:creator>
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			<title><![CDATA[Product Placement (And Microsoft) Are Alive And Well In 2050]]></title>
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				Okay, so Bollywood's <em>Love Story 2050</em> wasn't the masterpiece we were hoping for. At least it gave us a few sublimely silly moments, like this futuristic video game fight. That's something.				<a href="http://io9.com/5120327/product-placement-and-microsoft-are-alive-and-well-in-2050" title="Click here to read more about Product Placement (And Microsoft) Are Alive And Well In 2050">More&nbsp;&raquo;</a>
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			<pubDate><![CDATA[Mon, 29 Dec 2008 17:00:00 PST]]></pubDate>
			<dc:creator><![CDATA[Charlie Jane Anders]]></dc:creator>
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			<title><![CDATA[The History Of Product Placement In Science Fiction]]></title>
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				Science fiction is all about showing us new and startling worlds - and it doesn't hurt to sell a few widgets along the way. Like <em>Eureka</em>, which <a href="http://io9.com/5054137/eurekas-creators-dont-sweat-sponsorship-demands">recently proved</a> that you can save the world using Degree antiperspirant. Or the <em>Sarah Connor Chronicles</em>, which showed on Monday that a certain brand of car is the official vehicle of the anti-robot resistance. Product placement has been a part of science fiction for decades, but it's grown as the genre has become big business. Here's our history of the phenomenon since the beginning.

Science fiction helped to invent product placement, with Steven Spielberg's shoehorning of Reese's Pieces into <em>E.T.</em>, making them the official candy of penis-fingered growly alien visitors. But that wasn't actually the first instance of product placement in the genre.

What was? It's hard to say, but one of the earliest instances was the overexposure of Sugar Puffs cereal in 1966's <em>Daleks: Invasion Earth 2150 A.D.</em> The movie version of the classic Doctor Who story starred Peter Cushing as the eccentric time-traveler, who visits a ruined future London where the killing-machine Daleks have taken over. There's no food or clean water, and the survivors of the Dalek attacks live in total squalor. But hey... did we mention Sugar Puffs cereal is sugary and delicious? Sugar Puffs <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0060278/trivia">helped to finance the movie</a> in exchange for having their posters visible throughout.


Also, <em>2001: A Space Odyssey</em> features prominent references to, and fake ads for, Pan-Am, IBM and Howard Johnson. But those were simply companies that director  Stanley Kubrick thought would still be around in a few decades. As far as I can find out, no money actually changed hands - in fact, Kubrick contacted 50 companies and asked them to submit logos and designs for what their products might look like in 40 years. 

Also this nifty bit of Marlboro promo in a <em>Superman II</em> fight scene predates <em>E.T.</em> by a couple of years. Kneel before our cool, refreshing smokes:
<!-- videoId: q5815L9lv3k --><!-- /videoId: q5815L9lv3k -->

But yes, <em>E.T.</em>'s focus on Reese's Pieces may well have been the first high-profile example of product placement in a science fiction movie. The media reported widely that M&Ms had turned down the chance to be in the mega-hit, and Reese's Pieces reaped some extra publicity from all the coverage. The candy's sales <a href="http://www.businessweek.com/1998/25/b3583062.htm">spiked 65 percent</a> after the film came out, and kids <a href="http://blogs.pitch.com/plog/2008/10/studies_in_crap_letters_to_et.php">wrote to Steven Spielberg</a> with fan art that featured Reese's Pieces prominently: 


But there's also a lot of exposure for Coca-Cola, Coors beer, Speak'n'Spell and Pez candy, among other brands, in the movie. Here are some more screen shots:



Around the same time, TV's <em>Knight Rider</em> showed us the way forward in science fictional product placement: people will always want to buy the supercars they see featured on screen. (See below for <em>Transformers</em> and the new <em>K.R.</em>) General Motors <a href="http://www.ugo.com/movies/product-placement/?cur=Knight-rider">gave the show's makers models of the new Trans Am</a>, which they decked out as KITT, and people rushed to buy their own KITTs.

But <em>E.T.</em> and <em>Knight Rider</em> were like babies, or maybe monks, compared to the <em>Back To The Future</em> trilogy. Seriously, google "Back To The Future worst product placement" and set aside an hour or two to look at all the lists of the "worst movie product placement of all time" that include the <em>BTTF</em> trilogy. References to <a href="http://listverse.com/movies/top-10-blatant-examples-of-product-placement-in-movies/">Pepsi</a> are jammed into the first two films (like when Marty tries to order a Pepsi Free in 1955), his mom thinks he's named Calvin Klein, and the films ram Nike, Pizza Hut, AT&T, <a href="http://www.theshiznit.co.uk/review.php?id=144">Hasbro and Mattel</a> down your throat. (The DeLorean gets a free pass, because it's actually funny.) 


<em>Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home</em> <a href="http://memory-alpha.org/en/wiki/Star_Trek_IV:_The_Voyage_Home">took advantage of its present-day setting</a> to pimp Michelob beer - the official beer of the Federation - and of course, Scotty <a href="http://io9.com/5059256/iphone-apps-from-science-fiction">gets to know an Apple Macintosh better</a>. The Trek franchise liked that product-placement money so much, Kirk and his crew go camping in Levis jeans in <em>Star Trek V</em>. Meanwhile, Apple got sluttier and sluttier, getting some first-class pimping in <em>Mission Impossible</em> and <em>Independence Day</em> - where a Mac notebook is the key to stopping the alien invaders. And then in <em>Blade Trinity</em>, <a href="http://www.theshiznit.co.uk/review.php?id=144">one character goes to the iTunes music store</a> to assemble a playlist for her ipod, which she listens to while fighting vampires. There's also a nice Apple plug in <em>I Am Legend</em>.

Another movie which wins a spot in the product-placement hall of shame is <em>Demolition Man</em>. Sylvester Stallone gets woken up in the future, and finds that Taco Bell/Pizza Hut has won the "franchise wars" and now all restaurants are Pizza Huts:
<!-- videoId: UwZXHYxjn4U --><!-- /videoId: UwZXHYxjn4U --> 

One of the first television series to be accused of shoving consumer items in your face was <em>Babylon 5</em>, which stuck a gigantic Zima sign over the alien boxing ring in the episode "TKO." Series creator J. Michael Straczynski <a href="http://www.tv.com/babylon-5/tko/episode/25148/summary.html">insisted</a> the show got "not a dime" for the Zima plug, and it was just for the lolz.

<em>Men In Black</em> got a lot of flak for its relentless pushing of the Ray-Ban Predator 2 sunglasses, which <a href="http://www.media-awareness.ca/english/resources/educational/teachable_moments/word_from_our_sponsor.cfm">tripled in sales</a> to almost $5 million after the film came out. And <em>Men In Black II</em> is another proud moment for product whoring. An alien intruder arrives on Earth and needs to assume a form to confuse us humans. So of course her/its eye lights on a Victoria's Secret ad:
<!-- videoId: qCcn8prSVdo --><!-- /videoId: qCcn8prSVdo -->

And then there's the famous taxi chase in <em>The Fifth Element,</em> which leads up to the cops getting showered with McDonald's cartons. Good thing they still have Mickey D's  in this dystopian future:
 

One trend in the 2000s has been movies featuring fake advertisements for real products as part of the plot, sort of a throwback to <em>2001</em>. Who helped pioneer this? None other than Steven "Reese's Pieces" Spielberg, who has Tom Cruise walk through a mall full of personalized ads in <em>Minority Report</em>.
<!-- videoId: XbWNwhx15Gs --><!-- /videoId: XbWNwhx15Gs -->
Michael Bay also crams <em>The Island</em> full of fake ads, including a Chanel ad that stars the woman Scarlet Johnasson was cloned from. 

<em>I, Robot</em> pushed Converse's Chuck Taylor shoes so much, there's <a href="http://www.chucksconnection.com/irobot.html">a whole Chuck Taylor web page</a> devoted to the film. (The movie gets four Chucks out of five.) I have blotted this movie out of my memory, but apparently all Will Smith does in it is wave his "antique" Chuck Taylors around and talk about how fast he can run away from the killer robots, thanks to his Chucks. If you saw this movie and liked the shoes, could you buy your own pair? Gosh, I think so!

I could be here all day discussing the wealth of car product placement in recent movies. <em>The Lost World: Jurassic Park</em> features a new kind of Mercedes Benz SUV, and Steven "man-whore" Spielberg lovingly, frames a shot so you can see the Mercedes logo really clearly. That Steven. <em>The Matrix Reloaded</em> is such a great Cadillac ad, with its freeway chase, that the <a href="http://www.ugo.com/movies/product-placement/?cur=The-matrix-reloaded">DVD even has a featurette about the product placement</a>. <em>Terminator 3</em> is brought to you by Lexus and Toyota. <em>I Am Legend</em> is <a href="http://itvx.net/2007/12/26/i-am-legend-product-placement/">one big ad</a> for the Ford Mustang. <em>Transformers</em> is basically <a href="http://blogs.cars.com/kickingtires/2007/07/transformers-pr.html">built</a> around promoting GM's latest car models, and the second film is already getting buzz around the new Chevy Volt and Corvette models. <em>The Dark Knight</em> is plastered with Ford. We have a new <em>Knight Rider</em> show, which is basically a Ford Mustang infomercial as the car transforms into different Ford models. <em>Fringe</em> is also <a href="http://www.fringebloggers.com/fringes-lucky-escape/">chock full of Ford</a>. 

<em>Heroes</em> has had <a href="http://heroeswiki.com/Product_placement">product placement</a> for Sprint, Apple, Dell and other brands, but also especially Nissan.

A new growing category of product placement in science fiction, rivaling cars and computers: phones. After all, if you're under attack by aliens, you really need to be able to reach your comrades in a hurry. Hence, <em>Jericho</em>'s and <em>Heroes</em>' constant whoring for Sprint, <em>Superman Returns</em>' constant Samsung and Virgin whoring, <em>Cloverfield</em>'s Nokia love, etc. etc.

It's pretty amazing. Judging from our research, there's been more product placement, and more blatant product placement, in 2008 than in the past few years combined. We could literally spend an entire post just listing all the product placement this year. And it's getting way more blatant, especially on television. As we mentioned above, <em>Sarah Connor Chronicles</em> set a new high-water mark with its hour-long Dodge Ram commercial last week. <em>Smallville</em> <a href="http://io9.com/367788/smallville-sells-out-invites-you-along">devoted an entire episode</a> last spring to Stride gum, and how it can turn you into a superhero. And then there's <em>Eureka</em>, which has apparently been finding ways to feature Degree For Men in every. single. episode. this season, including the one where Degree provides protection from a lethally hot second sun. 



Where will it end? How much lower can we go? In the interests of ironic dystopian amusement, I can hardly wait to find out. 

<em>Additional reporting by Katharine Duckett.</em>				<a href="http://io9.com/5061426/the-history-of-product-placement-in-science-fiction" title="Click here to read more about The History Of Product Placement In Science Fiction">More&nbsp;&raquo;</a>
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			<pubDate><![CDATA[Mon, 13 Oct 2008 17:58:35 PDT]]></pubDate>
			<dc:creator><![CDATA[Charlie Jane Anders]]></dc:creator>
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