• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Trekker's 10 Worst Product Placements in TV/Movies

Trekker4747

Boldly going...
Premium Member
This is a list I just came up with of the first things that popped up in my mind. Add, discuss, amend as you may see fit.

10. I Am Legend - Ford Mustang:
The most benign of this list -hence it's number 10. In a post-apocalyptic New York City where a virus has turned most of humanity into ravenous CGI zombie-like creatures a man immune to the disease roams the ruins of civilization. By day he hunts down his dinner along with his companion dog and occasionally captures a zombie and hauls it home to work on a cure for the virus. The movie opens with establishing shots of New York City and Will Smith's character hauling-ass around the ruins in a Ford Mustang. A fun car, sure, but sort of impractical for survival purposes in such a nightmarish situation, certainly Will Smith's character figured this out as he spends the rest of the movie driving around in a far more practical SUV. The tearing ass, glamor shots, 'Stang Porn and such of Mustang in the opening moments? Just for product placement.

9 - I, Robot - Converse Shoes:
There was a LOT of product placements in this movie.
A lot. But Converse is the one that sticks out the most in my mind. Moments into the movie Will Smith's character -a technophobic Chicago policeman- opens up a package containing something he bought off eBay. Inside the package? Some Converse shoes circa 2004. The year? 2035. Yep. He bought 31 year old shoes off eBay, because he's so into them and apparently Chicago is plum out of vintage clothing stores. Oh, and the shoes are in near-perfect condition.

Think about this for a moment. Sure, vintage-style clothing is always a market but when's the last time you saw some shoes from 1978 that were anywhere near wearable?

8. - Independence Day - Apple/Macintosh:
Jeff Goldblum hacks into an alien computer system, uploads a virus -not to mention creates this virus- and takes down a spaceship large enough to make the Death Star shit its pants. He does this all on a circa 1996 Powerbook. Riiiight.

7. The Lost World: Jurassic Park - Nikon
About half an hour or so into this movie Jeff Goldblum and his wacky, well sad, crew of "explorers" are on Site-B, a second island with dinosaurs on it, to hunt down Goldblum's lost girlfriend. They find her and she's very excited to be a lone woman on a island full of creatures that want to eat her and while she seems kind of sharp she's mostly responsible for many of disasters that'll befall them in the rest of the movie.
Anyway, she runs up to a family of stegosaurus but she needs a camera so she asks one of Jeff's companions for one; he gives it to her and she asks, "Is it a Nikon?" Like if he said, "No, it's a Polaroid." she would've flipped him off and gone to sketch the dinosaurs. The Nikon screws her over moments later when the auto-winder goes off spooking the stegs into a mini-stampede. (It's also worth pointing out, too, that the yet-to-be-released at the time this movie came out Mercedes Sport-Utes were featured in this movie.)

6. Jurassic Park - B/F Goodwrench All Terrain Tires:
This one is subtle and kind of funny, actually, but also kind of shameless. Nedry is trying to catch up to the boat taking island workers off the island -which is being threatened by a tropical storm- even though he was told by a dockmaster like half an hour ago that the boat was leaving any moment. Nedry has also, presumably, traveled to and from the dock and the main building many times as part of his job on the island but yet can't find his own ass with both hands and a road map.

Anyway, he slides off the muddy road, slides into a ravine, and the Jeep gets stuck on a downed tree. We get a camera shot of a uselessly spinning tire as it stops on the white-on-black lettering "BF Goodwrench" the tire spins again and stops on "All Terrain - A/T." It's also counter productive because these product-placed tires got Nedry stuck on a tree and quickly eaten by a dinosaur.

5. Demolition Man - Taco Bell
This movie takes place sometime in 2030s. In it Taco Bell is the only restaurant in the country somehow surviving the "franchise wars" that happened decades earlier, "now all restaurants are Taco Bell!" The restaurant is also regarded as fine-dining and, it seems, no restaurant, ever, since these "franchise wars" has tried to enter the market to, you know, give people something different to eat.

4. Casino Royale - Omega Watches
Bond and Vesper are talking and she notices his watch. "Rolex?" she asks. "Omega," Bond answers. "Beautiful." she purrs. Uh-huh.

3. Star Trek (2009) - Nokia Phones
It's the mid 23rd century - nearly 300 years from now. A young James T. Kirk steals his step-father's circa 1966 Corvette and speeds down an Iowan road in it. A familiar sound goes off making many in the theater groan, roll their eyes, and look around the theater to see who the asshole is. The asshole turns out to be James Kirk. Apparently Nokia will not only survive the world-wars that will happen between now and then, survive 300 years, but they also won't change their theme tune. And, no, I don't buy the explanation that the phone in the car was installed in, and from, the 21st century. It still works and apparently the father knows the number for it. This is like stealing your dad's Model-T that has a working marconi machine in it and he's able to use his own marconi machine in it to yell at you. Oh, and to make matters worse the display for the Nokia phone device in the car says, "Nokia.com" on it. Because the internet is still around 300 years from now and file names will still have to be used to navigate it.

2. The Wizard - The Whole Fucking Movie
This whole movie is just an advertisement for Nintendo. Pure and simple, more-so Nintendo Power Magazine. This movie was made for ONE reason: To sell Nintendo games.

1. Smallville - Stride Gum
An entire fucking episode was made for this series solely to promote Stride Gum. Stride Gum apparently has a factory in Metropolis, a short drive from the titular town of our beloved super mopedope Clark Kent, and some evil fuck-tard in their R/D department has decided to take the meteor fragments from recent meteor showers (we know these fragments as kryptonite) and infuse its radioactive, rocky, goodness into gum. Strangely, this isn't the oddest use for kryptonite in Smallville which has been used as an enhancement for tattoo ink, sports drinks, perfumes, fuel-enhacment for street-racers and for ring-stones. Seriously, the stuff is like duct tape AND WD-40 rolled into one. There's nothing it can't do, we'll except not make a certain Kryptonian sick.

Anyway, this episode centers around the Gum-form of Kryptonite's versatile-for-all-consumer-goods-self and apparently chewing this gum -as Pete (a once regular, now greatly recurring character) does- gives one super-powers, it turns Pete into Mr. Fantastic. Or, rather, Mr. Incredible Douchebag. To make all of this worse while talking with Clark about the problem they're facing with their mutual friend Chloe learns of this Stride gum's power and states, "I guess next time I guess they won't make the flavor last so long." It's the first time I ever told Chloe to shut up.
 
Last edited:
For Casino Royale, Bond takes a long look at the GPS on his Sony Ericsson to make sure he's going to right way, even though his destination is straight ahead and in visual sight.

Product placement doesn't distract me unless it's seemingly out of place or too much time is spent on it (like in Frequency where Dennis Quaid unwraps some gum and the camera focuses in on the gum for more than a few seconds). A character drinking a Pepsi is fine, but drinking from a generic can that just says Cola is distracting.
 
None of them beat Jackie Chan's Wheels On Meals, where he nearly gets run over during a car chase, and the grille of the car comes right up into the camera, so that the Mitsubishi logo literally fills the entire screen, and the driver's voice shouts "It's lucky I had a great car or I could have been killed!"
 
Hmm.... Good question.

1.) Terminator - Chrysler Automotive Group Products (Namely Dodge Ram):
Yes I understand they're they number 1 sponsor of the show but that's no reason to have Complications open with the actors talking and the camera focused on the word RAM. Just beats number two because of the focus (and how drunk people were getting in the Terminator discussion threads).

2.) Smallville - Stride Gum: Yes we wrote the episode entirely to appease Stride Gum. Live with it.

3.) Smallville - Toyota Tundra: Yes I understand Clark needs a truck to make it seem like he actually has to drive places. I don't need a three minute flyby while we watch the truck drive in a 4x4 environment.

4.) I, Robot - Converse: Gotta go a lot further ahead for this than Trekker did. Those scenes just made me roll my eyes over and over again.

5.) Smallville - Toyota Yaris: Yes Chloe we know you love your Yaris yet that's no reason to say Yaris every other line (and even quote the gas mileage in one).

6.) Knight Rider - Ford Products: Yes I understand Ford is your number one supporter, but why are you so damned focused on that fact in every single frame?

7.) Demolition Man - Taco Bell: Wow so we had a franchise wars at some point in the early 21st century? Something tells me Taco Bell won't win. Sorry Taco Bell fans.

8.) James Bond Post Die Another Day - Sony: So Q defected and works for Sony now?

9.) Desperate Housewives - Sprint: The show has introduced characters recently that are from Sprint miniepisodes. To follow their storylines from the show - they play little clips in the episodes that involve the characters - you have to go to Sprint's website.

10.) Smallville - Microsoft: For those watching these days the last several episodes have shown a lot of Microsoft products.


Interestingly, I remember this from my marketing classes, Apple does not pay for product placement.
 
The Island -- why do clones who don't know anything about the outside world need a big huge sign telling them their video game is on Xbox?
 
I don't think I could pull a top 10 but some comments:

Smallville is the only show I can think of with multiple annoying placements.

Heroes pulled a "Yaris" with Claire's Nissan Rogue. My favorite part is that it's stolen a day after she get it by Maya and her brother and soon all of them are quickly forgotten. Should have kept the money flowing Nissan!

I think it was Highlander Endgame where they had a dual on the rooftop with a massive JVC sign utterly dominating every shot. I think this is the most intrusive example I've ever seen.

The Last Mimzy with its Pentium chip from the future was kind of nasty as well being a family movie and all. Start indoctrinating your kids early. Then again with all the Apple products on TV and movies it probably only starts to offset it.

Any show with nothing but one manufacturer's cars is annoying: Terminator, Walker Texas Ranger, 24, etc.

I've read in Europe, Demolition Man features Pizza Hut instead of Taco Bell but I couldn't find any corroborative evidence at Youtube.
 
Heroes pulled a "Yaris" with Claire's Nissan Rogue. My favorite part is that it's stolen a day after she get it by Maya and her brother and soon all of them are quickly forgotten. Should have kept the money flowing Nissan!

Don't forget Hiro and his Nissan Versa.
 
I think it was Highlander Endgame where they had a dual on the rooftop with a massive JVC sign utterly dominating every shot. I think this is the most intrusive example I've ever seen.

According to the audio commentary, JVC didn't pay anything for that sign. It was just something the location people put up to make the London location look more convincingly like New York. In the end, the filmmakers also thought it was too intrusive and in many shots they have digitally obscured it or drained the color out of it.

Independence Day - Apple/Macintosh:
Jeff Goldblum hacks into an alien computer system, uploads a virus -not to mention creates this virus- and takes down a spaceship large enough to make the Death Star shit its pants. He does this all on a circa 1996 Powerbook. Riiiight.

While it is a preposterous plot point, I don't really recall what specific computer he used. Therefore, if it was product placement, it wasn't very effective.

Demolition Man - Taco Bell
This movie takes place sometime in 2030s. In it Taco Bell is the only restaurant in the country somehow surviving the "franchise wars" that happened decades earlier, "now all restaurants are Taco Bell!" The restaurant is also regarded as fine-dining and, it seems, no restaurant, ever, since these "franchise wars" has tried to enter the market to, you know, give people something different to eat.

That was a joke. Even if it was a paid endorsement, it was integrated into the film in such a clever, rediculous way, I have to commend them for it.

I don't know if this was a paid endorsement or not but the camera seems to linger a long while upon Martha Kent's Cheerios box in Superman: The Movie.

It's been ages since I've seen it, but I've heard that Santa Claus: The Movie has some of the most blatant McDonalds product placement ever.

One of my favorite product placement stories is when Back to the Future got a contribution from the California Raisin people. Apparantly, one of the Universal guys told them that Back to the Future would do for raisins what E.T. did for Reese's Pieces.:rolleyes: In the end, the only way they could figure out to fit in this piece of product placement was to put the California Raisins logo on the bus bench that the bum is sleeping on at the end of the film. Ultimately, Universal gave the California Raisins people their money back.
 
I think it was Highlander Endgame where they had a dual on the rooftop with a massive JVC sign utterly dominating every shot. I think this is the most intrusive example I've ever seen.
Part of the film featured (heavily) the controversial Millennium Experience in what is now known as The O2, in London. That was a pretty desperate move, I feel.
 
5. Demolition Man - Taco Bell
This movie takes place sometime in 2030s. In it Taco Bell is the only restaurant in the country somehow surviving the "franchise wars" that happened decades earlier, "now all restaurants are Taco Bell!" The restaurant is also regarded as fine-dining and, it seems, no restaurant, ever, since these "franchise wars" has tried to enter the market to, you know, give people something different to eat.

I bet Taco Bell also sells a lot of seashells too, if you know what I mean!
 
8. - Independence Day - Apple/Macintosh:
Jeff Goldblum hacks into an alien computer system, uploads a virus -not to mention creates this virus- and takes down a spaceship large enough to make the Death Star shit its pants. He does this all on a circa 1996 Powerbook. Riiiight.

What makes it most unbelieveable -- it was a MAC! If you wanted to spread a virus, shouldn't have he used a PC with MS Outlook?



A couple other shows:

24 = Mac & Dell have been clearly featured. The joke has been that each season the good guys used one brand, and bad guys, the other

Eureka = Degree anti-perspirant. Someone else can give the details, but i think there ws an episode that basically had Eureka scientists create a hyper-version of the product to protect against fire/high heat.
 
3. Star Trek (2009) - Nokia Phones
It's the mid 23rd century - nearly 300 years from now. A young James T. Kirk steals his step-father's circa 1966 Corvette and speeds down an Iowan road in it. A familiar sound goes off making many in the theater groan, roll their eyes, and look around the theater to see who the asshole is. The asshole turns out to be James Kirk. Apparently Nokia will not only survive the world-wars that will happen between now and then, survive 300 years, but they also won't change their theme tune. And, no, I don't buy the explanation that the phone in the car was installed in, and from, the 21st century. It still works and apparently the father knows the number for it. This is like stealing your dad's Model-T that has a working marconi machine in it and he's able to use his own marconi machine in it to yell at you. Oh, and to make matters worse the display for the Nokia phone device in the car says, "Nokia.com" on it. Because the internet is still around 300 years from now and file names will still have to be used to navigate it.
I nearly burst out laughing in the movie theatre with this one. It's just so bald-faced that it's comical. At least the Budweiser product placement was slightly more subtle (but no less silly). Then again, the movie did have a number of unintentionally funny (to me) moments, chief among them the "bring me the red matter" lava lamp absurdity.
 
You forgot the longest commercial of all time: Transformers. There's a clip on YouTube showing all of the placements in the film, and it's LONG. I have not seen the second one, so I don't know if it was just as bad or not.

'24' has a lot of product placement, as already mentioned, but it always makes me laugh that the President and his/her cabinet ALWAYS uses Cisco Systems video uplinks. Every time.

This gets forgotten a lot, but the Tom Hanks film Cast Away is practically a 2 hour long advertisement for FedEx. Remember, he works for FedEx, he's flying on a FedEx plane when it crashes, and he uses items in FedEx packages on the island to survive. It gets even worse, since the volleyball he makes into a companion is called 'Wilson', which is actually the name of the manufacturer.

Men in Black 2: The company cars that turn into aircraft use PLAYSTATION 2 controllers for steering. I kid you not.

It always bothers me, honestly, when companies make fake products for films just so they can get their brand in the movie. Two cases in point:

-In Minority Report, Tom Cruise's character briefly drives a futuristic Lexus that doesn't exist. Even weirder, when the film was in theaters, Lexus was running a TV ad for this fake car. That you can't buy.
-In I, Robot, besides the awful Converse thing, Audi makes a futuristic car that Will Smith gets into chase scenes with at least once. He also rides a BMW motorcycle or something like that later in the film.

I also see that the movie Fantastic Four wins for most product placements in one single shot:

f4.jpg
 
Hackers - a movie never lost credibility so fast with product placement. No self respecting "hacker" uses a mac, yet in the movie that is all we see.
 
You forgot the longest commercial of all time: Transformers. There's a clip on YouTube showing all of the placements in the film, and it's LONG. I have not seen the second one, so I don't know if it was just as bad or not.

You're probably thinking of this. It's two minutes, eighteen seconds long.

I'm not sure I'd count some of the more incidental stuff, like the soldier's iPod, as product placement. But the Panasonic memory card was shameless.
 
Just watched Batman (1989) for the first time in forever tonight, and the only product placement I really noticed was one of the most blatant, ever.

Two muggers, on the roof, after holdin' up the Gotham tourists...one of them holds up a credit card and says, "American Express?" then changes his voice to imitate the commercial, "Don't leave home without it."

Such genius produce placement wouldn't be seen again until NBC's Chuck and the Subway "Five Dollar Footlong" special!
 
You forgot the longest commercial of all time: Transformers. There's a clip on YouTube showing all of the placements in the film, and it's LONG. I have not seen the second one, so I don't know if it was just as bad or not.

You're probably thinking of this. It's two minutes, eighteen seconds long.

I'm not sure I'd count some of the more incidental stuff, like the soldier's iPod, as product placement. But the Panasonic memory card was shameless.
They didn't even cover everything in that video, I remember the full movie having far more than that.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top