Slim-Fast trims Whoopi from ads

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happyhelper

Senior member
Feb 20, 2002
344
0
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Originally posted by: bozack
Originally posted by: Ldir

That was a nice smoke bomb. Censorship and "regualtions" (sic) are two entirely different subjects.

don't both work to stifle "free speech"??

yes of course, remember Tipper Gore! (what a ho!)
 

Baltazar325

Senior member
Jun 17, 2004
363
1
0
The thing is that no one's speech was threatened. You only have freedom of speech when it comes to Government intervention. AT censors speech here on a daily basis. There are certain words that cant be used when making a post.

If you want to walk up and down the street with a sign protesting whatever it is you want to protest, that is your right. It ends when you step in my yard.

For the record, I dont care what Whoopie said, I've never found her funny anyway. But the fact is that Slim Fast did care and she got canned.

BTW, didnt Savage get fired from something a year or so ago? He's an idiot anyway.
 

DealMonkey

Lifer
Nov 25, 2001
13,136
1
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Originally posted by: jackschmittusa
I reiterate, I think what these people did was stupid, but no freedoms were abridged. The only aspect of this whole thing worth considering is whether you agree with what these people did or not. This is much ado about nothing.
Right, the very premise of this thread was that (A) Yes, everyone was well within their rights to do what they did -- i.e. no freedoms were necessarily abridged, yet (B) When there are consequences for what you say (regardless of who you are), it has a chilling effect on free speech.

That was my only point.

Now, taken out of context, this one incident is not the end of the world. Yet, taken along with other similar incidents (Dixie Chicks, CBS/Reagan, etc.), a trend develops which seems to suggest that if conservatives or conservative groups don't like what you're saying about the President, they're going to organize against you and figure out an aggressive way to penalize your actions.

I still have yet to see anyone point out similar behavior on the left. Some mention of a Rush boycott -- does anyone have specifics on this?
 

Baltazar325

Senior member
Jun 17, 2004
363
1
0
Originally posted by: DealMonkey
Originally posted by: jackschmittusa
I reiterate, I think what these people did was stupid, but no freedoms were abridged. The only aspect of this whole thing worth considering is whether you agree with what these people did or not. This is much ado about nothing.
Right, the very premise of this thread was that (A) Yes, everyone was well within their rights to do what they did -- i.e. no freedoms were necessarily abridged, yet (B) When there are consequences for what you say (regardless of who you are), it has a chilling effect on free speech.

That was my only point.

Now, taken out of context, this one incident is not the end of the world. Yet, taken along with other similar incidents (Dixie Chicks, CBS/Reagan, etc.), a trend develops which seems to suggest that if conservatives or conservative groups don't like what you're saying about the President, they're going to organize against you and figure out an aggressive way to penalize your actions.

I still have yet to see anyone point out similar behavior on the left. Some mention of a Rush boycott -- does anyone have specifics on this?

I did a quck google search and found a few Limbaugh Boycott sites. Now, I havent read through them but there are sites out there. Some of them are old, but nonetheless.

I dont have a problem with either group doing this. It is the nature of things to push politics and beliefs on others. I am a conservative, and most of the time I vote Republican. However, I generally do not like Limbaugh, Savage and Hannity. Sometimes I agree with some of their points, however I find them to be zealots. And IMO, zealots of any type should be looked at with skepticism.

Anyway, here are the links. I dont claim that they are the best, but go here are a couple.


ESPN

Another one
 

wiin

Senior member
Oct 28, 1999
937
0
76
Todd33 said:
Limbaugh , Savage, etc. say worse things on a daily basis and on public airwaves


I don't know about Savage and whoever the etc you are referring to are but I've never heard Limbaugh say anyhthing like what Goldberg said.
 

Orsorum

Lifer
Dec 26, 2001
27,631
5
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Originally posted by: MachFive
Free speech goes both ways. Whoopi has a right to crack a joke, the uptight pricks who took up the letter-writing campaign have the right to air their self-righteous indignation and lack of a sense of humor, and the company, fearing a backlash, has the right to make a judgement call between offended consumers and the cost of kicking Whoopi out.

And those irritated or offended by their actions can write them expressing their dismay at the path they chose to take.

This wouldn't be the same as someone cracking a joke while not working - As a public spokesperson, she DOES represent the company in some capacity, and there is undoubtedly some portion of her contract which deals with her public persona. It's the cost of doing business.

Rush Limbaugh had his 1st Amendment rights to make potentially racist comments on ESPN, and people had a right to be upset and write ESPN about it.

There's no difference between the two scenarios, except one was a left-winger mouthing off and getting canned, and the other was a right-winger mouthing off and resigning pre-emptively.

Equality goes both ways.

Actually, there is a distinct difference between the two, that Whoopi was not in a Slim-Fast advertisement at the time she made her comments, but Rush was on ESPN, on the job, if you will.

It really comes down to what her contract states, and to which groups were placing the pressure on Slim-Fast to remove her ads.
 

CADsortaGUY

Lifer
Oct 19, 2001
25,162
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www.ShawCAD.com
Originally posted by: happyhelper
Originally posted by: CADkindaGUY
Originally posted by: DealMonkey
So seriously, are these "conservative groups and GOP supporters" simply unable to take a joke? I mean, as much as I personally don't think she's funny, she is supposedly a comedianne. Furthermore, I don't understand the concept that somehow Whoopi is a spokesperson for Slim-Fast 24/7. Obviously, this was a private fund raising event and had nothing whatsoever to do with Slim-Fast or their products.

Like I said, it seems like yet another campaign to silence critics of the current administration. The idea that there can be a penalty for free speech only serves to chill free speech. If you have to censor yourself 24/7 because your employer or your government (or over-zealous supporters of your government) can levy penalties on you, then you're not really free to say what you wish.

It really bothers me.

It isn't really about politics - it's about money. That company doesn't want to lose customers(you know....the people who pay for their product) for being associated with someone who willingly says questionable things.
It may have been funny to some, but others may not have taken it that way. I think you are(and others) are putting too much politics behind this instead of looking at the $. It's always about the $.

CkG

As usual, you exhibit your volitional blindness.

When is the last time a person lost their job because of a joke they told when they weren't doing their job? People tell crude jokes all the time, but normally the Fat Christian Zealots don't call up the company the joke teller works for and demand that he/she be fired or else they are going to boycott. The opposite of what you say is true - the only reason this happened is because of politics. Anyway, I am definitely not saying there is anything wrong with people using their "boycott power" but I am saying it is either extemely naive or deceptive of you to pretend it's not about politics when it's entirely about politics.

:roll:
If you can't see this is about money then it is you who is blind. Cripes. How hard is it to understand that having a "spokesperson" who stirred up a negative controversy willingly can cause loss of revenue. Do you have any clue how business and advertising works? How old are you? Have you paid attention to anything regarding "celebrity" endorsements - and how they get dropped after situations like this?

Again - it's pretty silly to look at this only through a political lens. Take your blinders off - just because it's an election year doesn't mean anything and everything is determined by politics.

CkG
 

DealMonkey

Lifer
Nov 25, 2001
13,136
1
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I agree with him Cad. How can you be so naive to suggest this has nothing to do with politics? The speech she's being punished for IS political speech (criticism of the administration/Bush). The groups going after her and pressuring Slim Fast to drop her are political groups associated strongly with the GOP. Of course this has to do with politics.
 

charrison

Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
17,033
1
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Originally posted by: DealMonkey
I agree with him Cad. How can you be so naive to suggest this has nothing to do with politics? The speech she's being punished for IS political speech (criticism of the administration/Bush). The groups going after her and pressuring Slim Fast to drop her are political groups associated strongly with the GOP. Of course this has to do with politics.

What groups went after her if i may ask?
 

Thump553

Lifer
Jun 2, 2000
12,839
2,625
136
Whoopi was being paid for her "celebrity" status to be a spokesperson for Slim-Fast. When she spoke out on political issues it antagonized potential customers so the company made a commercial decision to replace her. I don't fault them for that. And I think Whoopi handled this situation with class and honor. It does, however, serve as one more example of the meanspiritedness and intolerance of the organized pro-Bush supporters and reflects badly upon them.

This cuts both ways. Some years back Anita Bryant got very publically sacked by the Florida orange juice council because of public outrage over her homophobic statements.

If you are going to be paid to be a "celebrity" you have to play by the rules of the game. I don't feel sorry for them-most of us get paid for working, not for being.
 

charrison

Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
17,033
1
81
Originally posted by: charrison
Originally posted by: DealMonkey
I agree with him Cad. How can you be so naive to suggest this has nothing to do with politics? The speech she's being punished for IS political speech (criticism of the administration/Bush). The groups going after her and pressuring Slim Fast to drop her are political groups associated strongly with the GOP. Of course this has to do with politics.

What groups went after her if i may ask?

Crickets.....
 

Shad0hawK

Banned
May 26, 2003
1,456
0
0
Originally posted by: DealMonkey
So seriously, are these "conservative groups and GOP supporters" simply unable to take a joke? I mean, as much as I personally don't think she's funny, she is supposedly a comedianne. Furthermore, I don't understand the concept that somehow Whoopi is a spokesperson for Slim-Fast 24/7. Obviously, this was a private fund raising event and had nothing whatsoever to do with Slim-Fast or their products.

Like I said, it seems like yet another campaign to silence critics of the current administration. The idea that there can be a penalty for free speech only serves to chill free speech. If you have to censor yourself 24/7 because your employer or your government (or over-zealous supporters of your government) can levy penalties on you, then you're not really free to say what you wish.

It really bothers me.


i guess libs will never figure out "freedom of speech" is not a requirement for people to listen to them.
 

DealMonkey

Lifer
Nov 25, 2001
13,136
1
0
Originally posted by: charrison
Originally posted by: charrison
Originally posted by: DealMonkey
I agree with him Cad. How can you be so naive to suggest this has nothing to do with politics? The speech she's being punished for IS political speech (criticism of the administration/Bush). The groups going after her and pressuring Slim Fast to drop her are political groups associated strongly with the GOP. Of course this has to do with politics.

What groups went after her if i may ask?

Crickets.....

I have no idea what groups specifically, only the original article that suggests "Some conservative groups and GOP supporters had threatened to boycott Slim-Fast products if it did not take action."

Haven't had time to research it further.
 

Ryan

Lifer
Oct 31, 2000
27,519
2
81
Originally posted by: Todd33
Limbaugh , Savage, etc. say worse things on a daily basis and on public airwaves. Oh ya, they are pro-Bush and policed by the pro-Bush FCC.

Which is why MSNBC dumped savage a year ago because he called one of his callers a sodimite. Yea, it's all a right wing conspiracy, keep adjusting your tin foil hat, the FCC is trying to alter your mind. :roll:
 

chrisms

Diamond Member
Mar 9, 2003
6,615
0
0
Why must companies have values and opinions? What's next, an announcement that the Slim-Fast company endorses a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage?

Companies exist to sell products or services and make a profit. To see this kind of story yet again is sickening.
 

Ryan

Lifer
Oct 31, 2000
27,519
2
81
Originally posted by: chrisms
Why must companies have values and opinions? What's next, an announcement that the Slim-Fast company endorses a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage?

Companies exist to sell products or services and make a profit. To see this kind of story yet again is sickening.

When a large part of your customers are offended by your spokesperson, do you think nothing happens? When they can potentially effect your sales, profit goes down - simple logic :roll:
 

happyhelper

Senior member
Feb 20, 2002
344
0
0
Originally posted by: jackschmittusa at 7:37
happyhelper

I think you miss the whole point. It makes absolutely no difference why they threatened to boycott. As long as they can present the company with an acceptable reason (it wouldn't have worked if they had complained that she was black for example), the company is free to dump her.

She was free to say what she wanted. The people who complained were free to do so. The company obviously had a contract clause that made them free to fire her.

I reiterate, I think what these people did was stupid, but no freedoms were abridged. The only aspect of this whole thing worth considering is whether you agree with what these people did or not. This is much ado about nothing.

OK, Jack, what is different about what you said 5 hours after what I said:

Originally posted by: happyhelper at 2:26
DealMonkey,

I see what you are saying but I think you are missing a pertinent point. It's a free country. It wasn't the government that "silenced" Whoopi, but a group of people who worked together and notified the company that they were boycotting and the reason they were boycotting. I disagree with their reason, I think it was a stupid reason, and I disagree with the company, because I think their loss of sales probably wouldn't hurt them as much as whatever they have to pay Whoopi for breaching their contract with her. However, I think people do have the right to boycott, which is as equally valid a form of "free speech" as any other.

Jack, you tell me "I think you miss the whole point" and then proceeded to rewrite my point that I wrote 5 hours before you. I agree with you that "it makes absolutely no difference why they threatened to boycott" in terms of whether they had the legal right (aka freedom) to do it. I never claimed that "boycotting because of your political views" is wrong in any way. What I was arguing was some retarded person's (CADKindaGuy's) opinion that the boycotters weren't politically motivated. He said with full volitional blindness,
It isn't really about politics - it's about money. That company doesn't want to lose customers(you know....the people who pay for their product) for being associated with someone who willingly says questionable things.
Of course, to every company that has had a boycott directed at it, boycotts are about money - but money has nothing to do with the reason people get together to boycott a certain company - the reason these particular boycotters directed a boycott at Slim-Fast was purely political, and nothing more, and CADKindaGuy pretends it has nothing to do with politics. And then you tell me I missed the entire point, pretty comical stuff.

And you say it makes no difference whether the boycott and quick firing of whoopi was politically motivated or not. I have not yet seen how many people threatened to boycott Slim-Fast, nor do I have any way of knowing whether any of the people who wrote/called Slim-Fast threatening to boycott were in actuality people who ever buy Slim-Fast. Also, it's possible that the entire "boycott" story was made up by an employee of Slim-Fast who, like Riprotten and CADKindaGuy and others who would do anything to silence those who are opposed to or critical of Bush. Right or wrong, lawful or unlawful, this story does send the message that while it is not legal or PC to fire someone for their skin color, or religion or a list of other reasons, it is acceptable to fire people for being Democrats or for criticising a Republican President.
 

nutxo

Diamond Member
May 20, 2001
6,824
503
126
Originally posted by: chrisms
Why must companies have values and opinions? What's next, an announcement that the Slim-Fast company endorses a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage?

Companies exist to sell products or services and make a profit. To see this kind of story yet again is sickening.

A while back after seeing Micheal Savages name here I googled him to find out who he was. I found a page listing all the companies that had been coerced into pulling thier advertising for his show. This thing goes 2 ways I guess.

Myself, If I see a company employing someone popular with opposing political views I might not buy that product. Why support the opposition?
 

CaptnKirk

Lifer
Jul 25, 2002
10,053
0
71
In reality this could be a boon for the Farming industry.

Imagine how much money can be made with Whoopi eating again !
 

DealMonkey

Lifer
Nov 25, 2001
13,136
1
0
How much you want to bet those "conservative groups" and the "GOP Supporters" were no where near the democratic fund-raiser when Whoopi said what she said? How do they become so offended then? Via proxy? Vicariously? Did they go out of their way to be exposed to her direct quotes before getting on the phone with Slim-Fast?
 

Red Dawn

Elite Member
Jun 4, 2001
57,529
3
0
Originally posted by: Genesys
elton john upset at 'cencorship' in the US

ugh. people just dont seem to get that it's the people acting out their will and silencing the fools, not the government censoring them because of provacative speech.
Yep a minority, probably not even a large minority are causing Companies to censor or fire celebrities who speak out against the war and the Dub. Whose fault is it? Well it's the "Silent Majority" that don't say anything ..well with the exception of those who supported the Dixie Chicks with their wallets by buying their albums and going to their concerts in record numbers despite those on the Right trying to hurt them financially for speaking their minds
 

Gaard

Diamond Member
Feb 17, 2002
8,911
1
0
Originally posted by: DealMonkey
Originally posted by: charrison
Originally posted by: charrison
Originally posted by: DealMonkey
I agree with him Cad. How can you be so naive to suggest this has nothing to do with politics? The speech she's being punished for IS political speech (criticism of the administration/Bush). The groups going after her and pressuring Slim Fast to drop her are political groups associated strongly with the GOP. Of course this has to do with politics.

What groups went after her if i may ask?

Crickets.....

I have no idea what groups specifically, only the original article that suggests "Some conservative groups and GOP supporters had threatened to boycott Slim-Fast products if it did not take action."

Haven't had time to research it further.

Allow me charrison...

"Oh"