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Preston Gralla's picture
Preston Gralla

Seeing Through Windows

Microsoft: Family Guy, no; South Park, sex, and drugs, yes

Microsoft may find the Family Guy too off-color or off-center for sponsorship, but the company seems to have something of a double standard --- it's spent more than $1 million on ads for South Park, and it pays for ads on shows that feature drug dealing, violence, plenty of sex, and bathroom humor.

Microsoft initially said that it was going to sponsor a special titled "Family Guy Presents: Seth & Alex's Almost Live Comedy Show," on November 8, and was going to embed Windows 7 pitches directly into the show, rather than using traditional ads.

Then Microsoft saw the show, which according to Variety,

made typical "Family Guy" style jokes, including riffs on deaf people, the Holocaust, feminine hygiene and incest.

Microsoft pulled its sponsorship, saying in a statement, "the content was not a fit with the Windows brand."

According to some digging by the Los Angeles Times, though, Microsoft advertises on plenty of other TV shows that are in bad taste, and that feature sex, drug dealing, and more. The Times reports that Microsoft spent more than $4 million on "Two and a Half Men" last season. The paper goes on to say:

Although it's no "Family Guy," the sitcom can get pretty racy. In one recent episode titled "Laxative Tester, Horse Inseminator," there were jokes about condoms, teenage boys being aroused and the benefits to using a bidet.

The newspaper then goes on to report:

Other shows Microsoft helped bankroll include AMC's "Breaking Bad," a violent drama about a teacher who becomes a crystal meth dealer after he learns he has cancer; FX's "Nip/Tuck," which usually has enough sex to make Hugh Hefner blush; and "Rescue Me," which also loves its bathroom humor. Oh, and Microsoft likes Comedy Central's "South Park," where it dropped more than $1 million on commercials.

Oddly enough, Microsoft also spent plenty of money on Family Guy last season --- $3.2 million on Fox, and then $1.4 million on re-runs on TBS and Cartoon Network. So which content fits with the Windows brand, and which doesn't? I certainly can't tell...and I'm not sure Microsoft can, either.

What People Are Saying

South Park is definitely way

South Park is definitely way more intense than Family Guy - but it's also shown much later and targets a different demographic. It doesn't hurt that it's won multiple Emmys and a Peabody Award for journalistic entertainment.

I've never seen Two and a Half Men, but I've always perceived it as a standard, contemporary sitcom - certainly nothing remotely near South Park in its material (or quality).

That being said, it sounds like there's something strange going on within Microsoft. There's a news story there somewhere. It's just much deeper than can be unearthed with couch potato observations. What happened to interviews and thorough investigations?

It's obviously different...

It's obviously different to run commercials in between show segments, than to have your product featured within the show itself.

Exactly my thoughts...

I, too, can see a difference between embedding plugs for my product directly in a show written in poor taste, and running a commercial supporting my product during the commercial break of a show written in poor taste. I'm a little disappointed that Mr. Gralla cannot see the difference. His Microsoft controversy is "made" news as far as I am concerned.

I would also like to know how much of a hand upper management has in regulating commercial break advertisements, as opposed to this one-time special good deal partner-sponsorship that puts the product plug right in the middle of the show. I would expect the answer is "little-to-none" for the former as opposed to intimate involvement for the latter.

As for the Times, its a newspaper, trying to sell issues. As with all newspapers, it goes for the jugular regardless of whether the subject matter entitles it to or not. Hysteria sells issues, and newspapers are expert at finding hysteria in even the most placid of situations.

Microsoft is STUPID HYPOCRITES

South Park is WAYYYYYYY more disturbing and extreme than Family Guy.

What a bunch of idiots!! Both are great shows, Microsoft is just a company made of CRAP!!

MS? Southpark is more intelligent.

Mostly I feel sad for the braindeads who bought Vista, and are compelled to also pay for Win7.

Microsoft takes a dump in a box and everyone feels obligated to upgrade to it.

Win7 should be FKKN FREE for the pain Vista users went thru. GTH MS, long live GOOGLE.

Dump in a box

That's an even better visual than Scott McNealy's Windows hairball remark.

Keep up the good work!

There is a difference.

I could be completely wrong, but I think there is a difference between sponsoring a show by having commercials in the time slot and actually having content in the show while boasting your support for it.