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Nike ad that aired during the 2000 Summer Olympics but was pulled after viewers complained about it

77,519 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce •via X (Twitter)

10 Yorum

Joelene Townzen profil fotoğrafı
Joelene Townzen1 yıl önce

Certainly an ad that's not only memorable, but easily can recall for what product. Great ad, silly to stop airing it.

GeminiAus profil fotoğrafı
GeminiAus1 yıl önce

Actually genius ad, they should have kept airing it.

Vibhanshu Sharma profil fotoğrafı
Vibhanshu Sharma1 yıl önce

This should have been released during Halloween. 🎃

Joaquin profil fotoğrafı
Joaquin1 yıl önce

It was genius!

AussieTripa 🇦🇺💞𝕏 profil fotoğrafı
AussieTripa 🇦🇺💞𝕏1 yıl önce

You mean some bored person in their parents basement made a complaint?

Doolly Noted ✏️ profil fotoğrafı
Doolly Noted ✏️1 yıl önce

Why Was the Nike Olympic Ad Pulled in 2000? | Q&A During the 2000 Sydney Olympics, Nike aired an ad featuring runner Suzy Favor Hamilton escaping a chainsaw-wielding masked man in a horror movie parody. This advertisement sparked controversy, leading to thousands of complaints about promoting violence against women. Consequently, NBC decided to pull the ad from its Olympic coverage, causing a significant reaction both within and outside Nike. The ad was intended as a playful take on the horror genre but was met with widespread criticism. Viewers felt it was inappropriate for a family-oriented event like the Olympics, where the spirit of sportsmanship and respect is emphasized. Nike officials expressed disappointment over the decision, defending the ad's humor, but public opinion and network policy led to its removal. #Nike #Olympics2000 | 🏅📺😱

Florida Living (JustOh) 🇺🇸 profil fotoğrafı
Florida Living (JustOh) 🇺🇸1 yıl önce

Why? It's pretty cool. But I also was a big fan of horror movies in the 80s, so that was right up my alley.

अनुराग 🇮🇳 profil fotoğrafı
अनुराग 🇮🇳1 yıl önce

NBC said it was dropping the ad. Executives said viewers were horrified that the network had run the ad, which had terrified their children. Nike was disappointed, but unapologetic. In a reply posted on its Web site, Nike's vice president of U.S. Marketing, Mike Wilskey, said the ad will continue to run in other media (ESPN for one). "Our rule," he said, "has always been to respect the intelligence of our consumer ?

Ɖusk profil fotoğrafı
Ɖusk1 yıl önce

so woke

JCP81 profil fotoğrafı
JCP811 yıl önce

Nike should run that every Halloween time. Nothin to complain about. Some crybaby viewers cryin about nothin.

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