QUICK HITS: Uniform Advertising

The allure is there. The commercialization of sports. The money grab. The spontaneous dismissal of
tradition.

I’ve heard it all this week in response to the National Basketball
Association’s announcement that they will soon sell advertising on their jersey—a
move the league says could generate an additional $100 million.
The outrage is borderline comical; after all, we live in the land of
product placement. You can’t go through an hour of television without seeing an
iPad or Pepsi inserted into every third scene on Modern Family or Two and Half
Men
.
I say, “What took them so long?”
No one seems to mind all of the sponsor logos in NASCAR or the English
Premiere League. So let the Wells Fargo Celtics and the Sbarro Knicks and the Target
Timberwolves reign supreme.
Branding is king, so don’t get yourself in an uproar.
As someone who appreciates a smart advertising campaign, I salute the
NBA as a (once again) trailblazer being the first of the major sport to sell
jerseys as walking billboards.
In a decade, as the crowds roar for the Dallas Mavericks brought to you by
Citibank, you most likely won’t recall that anything was ever different.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *