The Commercial Games: How Commercialism is Overrunning the Olympics
The 2008 Beijing Olympic Games
have been referred to as the "People's Games," the "High Tech Games"
and the "Green Games," but they could be more aptly described as the
Commercial Games.
professed ideals of the Olympic Games, and subverting the Olympics'
veneration of sport with omnipresent commercial messaging and branding.
The Olympics have auctioned off virtually every aspect of the Games to
the highest bidder. In addition to multimillion-dollar sponsorship
deals between the International Olympic Committee and international
companies, smaller firms are paying for designations from "official
home and industrial flooring supplier" to the "frozen dumplings
exclusive supplier" of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games.
Corporate sponsors are showering money on each tier of the Olympic
organizational committees: the International Olympic Committee, the
Beijing Organizing Committee of the Olympic Games (BOCOG) and the
International Federations governing each individual sport, to each
country's National Organizing Committees. Corporations are sponsoring
many Olympic teams and national governing bodies for particular sports
-- including virtually every national governing body in the United
States -- and individual athletes themselves.
The scope of commercialism at the Olympics and the consequences of commercialization are detailed in "The Commercial Games," a new report from Multinational Monitor magazine and Commercial Alert (both of which I'm associated with).
To its credit, the Olympics do prohibit advertising in sports stadia or
other venues. The Olympics also prohibit advertisements on uniforms
(other than uniform maker logos).
Everywhere else, Olympic spectators, viewers and athletes, and the
citizens of Beijing should expect to be overwhelmed with
Olympics-related advertising.
A record 63 companies have become sponsors or partners of the Beijing
Olympics, and Olympics-related advertising in China alone could reach
$4 billion to $6 billion this year, according to CSM, a Beijing
marketing research firm.
The Olympic Partners (TOP) program,
run and managed by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) since
1985, includes 12 companies for the Beijing Olympics. These 12
companies -- among them, Coca-Cola, GE, Johnson & Johnson, Lenovo,
Panasonic and Visa -- have paid $866 million to the International
Olympic Committee.
The U.S. Olympic system is awash in corporate sponsor money. Well over
100 corporations are sponsoring the U.S. Olympic Committee or U.S.
national teams.
Besides celebrating sport, there is an official ideology of the Olympics, called "Olympism." It aims to promote a pure blend of sport, culture and education.
Sports, of course, remain at the center of the Olympics, but
commercialism has overwhelmed whatever other values the Olympics hope
to embody. The overwhelming cultural influence at the Olympics is now
commercial culture; and the overwhelming informational message is: buy,
buy, buy.
Commercial relations interfere with proper functioning of the Olympics.
In at least one notable case, commercial entanglements have called into
question the integrity of a national sports governing body. A lawsuit
and accusations around the activities of USA Swimming and the national
team coach -- both sponsored by swimwear maker Speedo -- charge Speedo,
the national team and the coach with antitrust violations. The lawsuit,
filed by Tyr, a Speedo competitor, alleges the coach has trumpeted the
benefits of LZR Racer, a new, high-profile Speedo suit, because of his
financial ties to the company. Tyr says its Tracer Rise swimsuit,
introduced weeks before the LZR Racer, is comparable to the Speedo
product.
The Olympic race for corporate sponsors has also put the Olympics in unhealthy -- and sometimes quite unpleasant -- company.
+ The International Olympic Committee will not partner with hard liquor
companies, but the IOC tolerates sponsorships by beer and wine
companies. Anheuser-Busch says it is a sponsor of 25 national Olympic
Committees, including those of China, Japan, Great Britain and the
United States. A tequila maker, Jose Cuervo, is a sponsor of the U.S.
Soccer Federation.
+ Notwithstanding the fundamental principles of "Olympism," which
celebrate healthful living, two of the 12 Olympic TOP sponsors run
businesses centered around the sales of unhealthy food: Coca-Cola and
McDonald's. Snickers, the candy bar made by Mars, is an official BOCOG
supplier. Hershey's is a sponsor of the USOC. Coca-Cola is a sponsor of
FIFA, the international soccer federation. McDonald's and Sprite are
sponsors of USA Basketball. McDonald's and Sierra Mist are sponsors of
the U.S. Soccer Federation. Coca-Cola is a sponsor of USA Softball.
Hershey's is a sponsor of USA Track & Field.
+ Many of the sports apparel and equipment makers partnered with the Olympics and official Olympic bodies -- among them Adidas, Nike and Speedo -- source their products from sweatshop factories. In a very disturbing development just before the start of the Olympics, Adidas reportedly announced it was transferring large amounts of its production out of China because wages set by the government were "too high" (!).
+ At least two major Olympic partners, the China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) and Sinopec, have been linked to gross human rights violations in Sudan. Both companies are sponsors of the Beijing Organizing Committee of the Olympic Games.
There is no doubt that the horse is out of the barn on Olympic
sponsorships, and the world is unlikely to see a commercial-free Games
anytime soon.
Nonetheless, the most egregious problems with the Olympics' pervasive sponsorship arrangements can and should be addressed.
The IOC, National Olympic Committees, and international and national
sports governing bodies can and should scale back the number of
corporate sponsorships.
They can and should develop safeguards to ensure apparel and equipment
sponsorships do not compromise sports governing bodies' decisions.
Coaches of national teams should be prohibited from serving as paid
spokespeople or consultants for apparel and equipment makers.
They can and should refuse to accept sponsorships from any alcohol
company, including beer and wine companies. This recommendation does
not reflect a prohibitionist impulse. It merely extends the insight in
the present IOC ban on hard liquor sponsorships: promoting more alcohol
consumption is unhealthful, and inappropriate for an event with
enormous appeal to children.
They can and should end partnerships and sponsorship arrangements with
junk food, soda and fast food companies. These companies' operations
are incompatible with Olympic ideals of promoting fitness and healthful
living, and the companies use the association with the Olympics to
remove some of the tarnish of their unhealthy products.
They can and should insist that official, sponsoring apparel and
equipment makers disclose where their products are manufactured, and
ensure that their products are manufactured in a fashion that respects
core labor standards.
They can and should refuse to enter into sponsorship arrangements with
companies connected to gross human rights abuses. This is a simple
ethical standard, and one required by the Olympic commitment to
demonstrate "respect for universal fundamental ethical principles."
Will the IOC and other committees move in these directions? They
refused to respond to repeated requests for comment. It may be,
however, that it will be the corporate sector driving reduced
commercialization of the Olympics. The opportunity to project a
high-profile in China's fast-growing market has made the Beijing
Olympics uniquely attractive; but already leading sponsors
have indicated they do not intend to continue paying for the right to
besiege the planet with Olympics-related marketing in connection with
future Games.
Original post at:
http://www.multinationalmonitor.org/editorsblog/
Multinational Monitor Editor Robert Weissman is managing director of
Commercial Alert, which opposes excessive commercialism in society.
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