(정치) 미 대통령 상업 광고 등장
(정치) 미 대통령 상업 광고 등장
And a new and controversial billboard model in Times Square. Nightly news begins now. If you’ve been to New York’s Times Square, you know it’s a bewildering갈피를 못 잡는 place. It’s as bright as day, 24 hours a day, it’s hard to pick out any one thing there to focus on, but this week a lot of the attention has been focused on just one billboard. It’s right there above the Red Lobster. It’s the man modeling outerwear in the photo who’s getting the attention, as you’ll see in our report now from NBC’s Rehema Ellis.
In a place where all the advertising is larger than life, now an image in Times Square someone who really fits the bill목적에 맞다. But president Obama hocking전당 잡히다 a jacket? How? When visiting the Great Wall of China last November, this photo was taken. The coat company bought the photo from a news agency without the president’s permission. And now it’s a gigantic billboard. “Our intention wasn’t to get press. Our intention was to take the president of the United States and put him in a very, very favorable light.”
It’s also got a lot of folks talking. Let’s face it. If you want your product seen by a lot of people in a short amount of time, you put it here. Times Square is one of the busiest places in the world. Half a million people pass through here every day. And it’s not just the president getting noticed. The animal rights organization PETA has created this poster and it’s spreading online without the first lady’s permission claiming she does not wear fur. “This is America. We have the right to show the photograph. She is fur free and she looks fantastic.”
They both do, but should the leader of the free world be used to pitch협력하다 a clothing line? “It’s not criminal, but it is unlawful and it violates the president’s right of publicity. As I said, he has a right to choose whether to endorse anything, and if he wants, he can choose not to endorse anything at all.” The White House wants the images removed. Whatever happens, both groups have gotten plenty of exposure worldwide exactly what they wanted. Rehema Ellis, NBC News, New York.