When a sexually charged ad for TBS' "The Real Gilligan's Island" appeared on left-wing political blog DailyKos, it sparked protests among the site's liberal readers, leading some to form a splinter
blog, "Women Kossacks." It also led to an increase in traffic at the site hosting the ad. The tumult, similar to the stir caused recently by Paris Hilton's ad for Carl's Jr., illustrates the growing
interdependency between TV ads and blogs.
The ad was posted June 1 by BlogAds, an ad-serving network of roughly 700 blogs including DailyKos, one of the top progressive political blogs on the Web
with weekly traffic of 2,775,481 unique users, according to creator Markos Zuniga.
In a conceptual mash-up, the ad, entitled simply "Pie Fight" and created by Stun Creative, combines
characters from the old TV show "Gilligan's Island" with the concept of the popular "Catfight" ad for Miller Lite beer. "Pie Fight" depicts original TV characters Mary Ann and Ginger fighting about
what makes a good coconut cream pie; they ultimately throw pies at each other, wrestle, and get rinsed off with a bucket of water.
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Richard Turner, the senior director of interactive marketing
for Turner, Inc., said it was meant to be humorous. "It's an obvious parody," said Richard Turner, the senior director of interactive marketing for Turner, Inc. "Hopefully, people will enjoy the gag
and be a part of that entertaining piece of video."
But not all of the DailyKos readers, variably referred to as "Kossacks" or "Kos Kids," were amused. Many of Kos' female readers expressed
offense and even outrage that the ad, which they say objectifies women, would be hosted on a progressive site like DailyKos.
Zuniga issued a scathing response on his blog: "Whatever. Feel
free to be offended. I find such humorless, knee-jerk reactions, to be tedious at best, sanctimonious and arrogant at worst .... Feel free to claim that I'm somehow abandoning "progressive principles"
by running the ad. It's a free country. Feel free to storm off in a huff. Other deserving bloggers could use the patronage."
And storm off some of his readers did--establishing a new blog
dedicated to discussing feminist issues on DailyKos, entitled "Women Kossacks." Dozens of other bloggers commented on the controversy at Kos, citing the ad, and causing discussion of TBS in the
blogosphere to spike. According to Intelliseek's Blogpulse, posts regarding TBS roughly doubled from June 4 to June 5, while the debate was raging.
Turner said that the company had no idea
what sort of controversy the ad would cause. "We knew it would draw a reaction, but you never know how people will respond to a creative," he said.
What's been the effect of that conversation
on TBS.com's traffic? Streams of the ad have roughly doubled, Turner said, although exact numbers could not be provided by press time. And according to Turner, ultimately the controversy is good for
the ad. "Ultimately, if it helps people become aware of the program, then yes--it's a good thing," he said.
Likewise, Zuniga said that the complaints from offended parties only added
publicity to the ad. "The more people have [complained] about the ad, the more successful it has become. It is now the most successful ad in the history of this site, with close to 8,000
click-throughs over the low-traffic weekend," he wrote. "And, now that you have demanded I respond to the ad, thousands more will click through to see what the big deal is all about."