MLB drops Spiderman base covers

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Another Day, Another Dollar
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Los Angeles, CA, May. 7 (UPI) -- Based on a public outcry, Major League Baseball has decided not to use images from the "Spider-man 2" movie on base covers next month.

A joint statement from MLB and Columbia Pictures said the film's promotional weekend running June 11-13 is still on, but the unprecedented use of advertising images on bases is off.

"We understand that a segment of our fans was uncomfortable with this particular component and we do not want to detract from the fan's experience in any way," said Bob DuPuy, MLB's president and chief operating officer.

As announced on May 5, the focus of the marketing partnership will be a weekend of "Spider-Man 2" events coordinated with MLB Properties and the 15 MLB Clubs hosting home games.

During "Spider-Man 2" Weekend, ballparks will feature in-park signage and each club will feature special promotional giveaways. In addition, highlights from the movie will run on stadium video boards to promote the movie's June 30 release.

http://washingtontimes.com
 

And if the Road Warrior says it, it must be true..
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thought it was a cool idea....
 

Having the time of my life!!
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Agree, thought MLB might as well get in the $ hunt with all rest of Leagues...thought the 3.5 mill was kinda cheap price , but look at all the free pub the movie already got from this...every major sports talk show and TV sports shows have discussed it and reported it already...pretty smart on the movies part....GO SPIDERMAN!!!!
 

Having the time of my life!!
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Also, wonder what THE REAL reason MLB dropped the Spiderman stuff...believe me, MLB did not just change due to fan response...they do nothing due to fan response!!!!...why not change the drug policy..why not speed up the game...why not etc. etc.....
 

Another Day, Another Dollar
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MLB must be for Nader as he complained about this.
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Official Rx music critic and beer snob
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Selig is an idiot and would space on the ball itself if he thought he could get away with it.
 

Honey Badger Don't Give A Shit
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Actually the real story here is that former big leaguer Glenallen Hill was considering a comeback and the deal would have made it impossible for him to run the bases.

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Another Day, Another Dollar
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Commissioner Bud Selig defended the ludicrous cross-promotion deal on "Spider-Man 2" at his Oakland news conference by saying that baseball was trying to reach out to the youth market.

Pathetic.

If baseball really wants to reach out to the youth market, it should put some money into keeping playgrounds open for youngsters to play baseball.

In an earlier time, baseball was played on playgrounds across the country throughout the summer months, and those games produced players for the professional sport and fans for life.

When I was young, we played ball in summer almost from daybreak to sunset. We didn't have coaches telling us what to do, or fancy uniforms and equipment. Often, we didn't even have covers on the baseballs, because we'd knocked the covers off. We just taped them up and kept playing.

And, we developed a life-long passion for the game.

Now, the only baseball played is in the Little League program, and those games end in mid-July. If you walk through a city today, you see kids playing basketball, not baseball. In suburban areas, it's soccer.

As a result, you see a dwindling number of American players in Major League Baseball..

Ah, but we're going to cure that problem with a Spider-Man promotion.

In truth, it's become all about money for Major League Baseball, and the Spider-Man mess is just another example.

If MLB was really interested in reaching out to the "youth market," it would put postseason games, including the World Series, on early enough so youngsters could watch and still go to school the next day. But TV ratings, said Selig, go up the later the game is on. It's adults watching, of course, not youngsters.

The parallel with the movie industry is telling. The film industry is selling more and more tickets with movies that emphasize special effects, with the story line often a casualty.

Baseball will set an all-time attendance record, Selig predicted, but it's with a watered-down product that is treated like an entertainment vehicle, not a sport.

The first sign of greed was expansion beyond the original 16 teams. Then came the big television contracts and now, in the case of select teams like the Yankees and Red Sox, cable-TV companies that have greatly expanded revenues. To pay for those contracts, TV networks put in more commercials between innings, which slows the game to a snail's pace.

Baseball once was the contemplative sport. True fans came out early to watch batting practice, because a two-hour game wasn't enough to satisfy them. They would watch the game intently, anticipating situations and matching their own private decisions with those made by the manager. At appropriate times, they would cheer.

No longer. Now, fans are bombarded with constant noise, from rap (I will not call that music) to games on the giant screens behind center field. They are constantly exhorted to "Make Some Noise."

Why this change? Because baseball has expanded its marketing beyond the real fans, to casual watchers who know and care little about the rhythms of the game. These "fans" may only come to 2-3 games a year, but if you get enough of them, teams can expand their attendance.

So, the true fans, who might come to 20-25 games a year, have to endure the sideshow.

This expansion of the market has come at a price. Though attendance is at an all-time high, there are also dramatic fluctuations.

The new stadiums are no cure-all, either, as Selig admitted. The Milwaukee Brewers, whose chairman of the board is Selig's daughter, have dropped 1.1 million in attendance since their new park was opened. Pittsburgh's attendance is two-thirds what it was in its first year in PNC Park, Detroit's about half of its first year in Comerica Park. In each case, the teams playing in those stadiums are losing teams.

Detroit was once known as a great baseball city, whose fans supported their team through thick and thin. But those were the hard-core fans, who loved watching baseball, even losing baseball. The new fans demand a winner, and who can blame them at the ticket prices they're paying?

Baseball was once the game that symbolized America. Unfortunately, in its new mode of all-out greed, it still is.

http://sfgate.com
 

Official Rx music critic and beer snob
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SF did.

Thunder - Kind of funny you brought that up. The guy who wanted to buy the Expos and move them to Vermont this winter is getting no support. He wanted to finance the stadium himself and the owners don't want that.
 

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