Product placement could erode TV writers’ control over story, warns guild

Published Wednesday 2 July 2008 at 14:25 by Matthew Hemley

Exclusive: Screenwriters have spoken out against proposals to allow product placement on UK television, claiming the move would give them less editorial control and see advertisers and sponsors dictate a show’s dramatic content.

The concerns were raised in a letter to culture secretary Andy Burnham from the Writers’ Guild of Great Britain, which claims that allowing labels and brands to be included in UK shows would damage the “integrity of British-scripted comedy and drama”.

Although product placement is currently banned in the UK, the European Union recently ruled that member states can choose to allow product placement in commercial TV programmes, excluding certain genres such as children’s shows.

EU member states are obliged to consider the EU directive and a UK consultation on the issue is set to get under way this summer, with the government due to give its final response next year.

However, the guild has outlined its concerns to Burnham ahead of this and has suggested that placement could lead to a writer having less control over a show’s story.

“Will sponsors and advertisers purchase the right to have a product, such as a soft drink or brand of clothing, featured in a scripted show?

“Or will they purchase a right to exercise editorial control over the humorous or dramatic content of the show? We would caution against any changes that fundamentally change the editorial decision-making process,” it said.

Writers’ Guild deputy general secretary Anne Hogben added that a “worst case scenario” could see a writer told that a character had to drink a certain product or drive a certain car and said: “It could mean a writer had to act as a free copywriter for advertisers.”

The guild has also raised concerns that product placement could lead to more dramas about wealthy people, arguing that “product placement tends to favour shows with an aspirational dimension - where characters enjoy a relatively high income and associated lifestyle”.

It said: “We need to ensure that product placement does not lead to an over-reliance on aspirational programming, or a reluctance to tell stories about marginalised, unpopular or lower-income groups.”

Although advertisers have been lobbying for product placement to be allowed following declining revenue from traditional TV adverts, Burnham has indicated the UK government is unlikely to allow it, claiming product placement would “contaminate” British TV programmes.

Hogben praised Burnham’s comments and said the guild and its members were “relieved and grateful to have a government minister speaking out in support of maintaining the integrity of British-scripted comedy and drama”.

To contact the Stage news team email newsdesk@thestage.co.uk or call 020 7403 1818, selecting option 2 (editorial) followed by option 1 (newsdesk).
If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly "for publication".

Follow The Stage on Twitter and Facebook to get the latest entertainment industry news to your desktop or mobile.

The Stage Events
Loading

Latest news

Tom Ellis to appear as part of BBC1’s The Preston Passion
Tom Ellis and Christine Bottomley are among the actors being lined up to appear in three new dramas being made as…
Doctor Who star Matt Smith made patron of Royal Court Young Writers Festival
Matt Smith has been appointed as patron of the Royal Court’s Young Writers Festival.
Christopher Eccleston joins NT Antigone
Christopher Eccleston has been cast in the National Theatre’s forthcoming production of Antigone.
Dirty Dancing musical extends UK tour
Dirty Dancing is to extend its UK tour into the summer of 2013, with producers announcing five more dates.
King’s Cross Award for New Writing winner announced
Rob Johnston has won the King’s Cross Award for New Writing 2011.
ITV to expand characters’ storylines online
ITV is to expand on the storylines of characters in Emmerdale, by creating content that can only be accessed online.

Content is copyright © 2012 The Stage Media Company Limited unless otherwise stated.

All RSS feeds are published for personal, non-commercial use. (What’s RSS?)