WATCHING A STORY EXPLODE
May 8, 2013
SAN DIEGO — It used to
be, when you're working a major news story, events dictate coverage.
A
bombing occurs. People are hurt, hospitals are activated. There's a widespread
investigation and, eventually, the suspects are apprehended.
A
wildfire spreads, homes burn, firefighters fight, the fire is contained.
A
scandal is uncovered, an investigation ensues, Congress holds hearings, someone
loses their job....
You
get my drift.
But
these days a story can take on a life of its own that has nothing to do with
events. It is a fascinating process to observe and is almost a parallel
journalistic universe to the one that is following actual news events.
That
happened in our Fronteras Desk newsroom this week. An obscure little story was
spotted on an industry blog. The blog
reported that Disney Enterprises, Inc. had filed a trademark application for
the phrase "Dia De Los Muertos."
We
thought, "Interesting story, let's do a spot for radio on that, and, as
we're reporting the radio spot, we'll post
a little story on our website."
And
so our Social Media Editor John Rosman did a little reporting, found the
trademark application and posted a story
with a great picture on our website around 10 a.m. on Tuesday morning.
And
then we watched the story take on a life of its own. Within minutes it was
being tweeted and retweeted around the twittersphere. Facebook
"likes" expanded like a mushroom cloud. Page views grew and grew and
grew. By midday we were looking at thousands of Facebook likes and hundreds of
comments on our website. And it just continued to surge and swell. Nothing was
actually happening, but the story was ALIVE, expanding in front of our eyes.
At
the end of the news cycle, the Disney story on the Fronteras Desk website
garnered more 71,000 visits, with 96 percent of those were from unique, first
time visitors. Facebook likes on the story topped 32,000.
Oh,
and by the end of the day, Disney
announced to Fronteras Desk that it was withdrawing the trademark
application.
Now,
those numbers probably are not much when compared to what a major news
operation may get in any given day, but they were astounding for this little
newsroom and even more astounding to watch as it happened.
It
was not a big story; just a news blip. But it was a fascinating exercise in
viral journalism. Instead of running around trying to find interviews, track
down sources, collect sound and copy for a story, we're sitting in our newsroom
watching the numbers spiral into the tens of thousands and ultimately impact
the news itself.
For
an old-school journalist like myself, it was nearly as exciting as an
event-based news story. It was a different beast though, and ~ like so many
have commented in the past ~ a brave new world where the story becomes the
story.
DISNEY WANTS TO TRADEMARK 'DIA DE LOS MUERTOS'
Photo by Veronica
Zaragovia.
UPDATE: A
Disney studio spokesperson told Fronteras Desk late Tuesday afternoon the
company will be withdrawing its trademark filing.
“As we have
previously announced, Disney-Pixar is developing an animated feature inspired
by the Mexican holiday Día de los Muertos. Disney’s trademark filing was
intended to protect any potential title for our film and related activities. It
has since been determined that the title of the film will change and therefore
we are withdrawing our trademark filing.”
As first
reported by Stich
Kingdom, on May 1, Disney Enterprises, Inc., a subsidiary of the Walt
Disney Company, filed trademark
applications to secure the phrase "Dia de los Muertos" across
multiple platforms for an upcoming
Pixar film.
Dia de Los
Muertos is a popular
holiday celebrated across Latin America, especially in Mexico and Central America,
and it has become more popular in the United States. Families commemorate the
lives of lost family members or friends between Oct. 31 and Nov. 2 each year.
Disney filed
10 requests in the U.S. Trademark and Patent Office this month to coin the
phrase. Disney's filings are mainly for merchandise, presumably connected to an
upcoming film.
The areas
they are hoping to secure include “education and entertainment services,”
“fruit preserves; fruit-based snack foods,” “toys, games and playthings,”
“clothing,” “footwear,” “backpacks,” “clocks and jewelry” and more.
Rod Berman, a patent attorney
in California, says Disney is filing to protect products, not steal a holiday.
"Even
if Disney were to obtain trademark registration, that wouldn't prevent anyone
from practicing their faith or having the holiday," Berman said.
In the past,
Disney sought to trademark "SEAL
Team Six" the Navy SEAL team that assassinated Osama Bin Laden. They
wanted exclusive rights ranging from toys to snow globes. After outcry from
critics, The
Wall Street Journal reported Disney withdrew the application "out
of deference to the Navy."
Many reacted
angrily to the "Dia de los Muertos" news on social media, with some
accusing Disney of trying to profit from a sacred Mexican tradition. Disney has
not yet responded.
Do you think
mass-marketed items tied to a holiday promote understanding and acceptance
across cultures? Or does it profit from some people's religious traditions?
A Houston
company listed as The Valence Group already holds a 2007 trademark for
"Día de los Muertos" for entertainment services like theater, plays
and musicals. A gaming company in Nevada holds a 2012 trademark for "Día
de Muertos."
The U.S.
Trademark and Patent Office has issued trademarks related to other holidays such
as Christmas and Hanukkah.
AFTER OUTCRY, DISNEY WITHDRAWS EFFORT TO TRADEMARK 'DIA DE LOS MUERTOS'
May 7, 2013
The
Walt Disney Company told Fronteras Desk it will withdraw trademark applications
related to the Day of the Dead holiday. Disney made the decision late Tuesday
after an avalanche of social media backlash.
The
story went viral Tuesday morning: Disney
files to trademark the phrase "Día de los Muertos." That's the
Spanish name for the annual Mexican tradition of honoring deceased family members
and friends.
The
trademark request was related to an upcoming Disney-Pixar film inspired by the
holiday.
The
news did not go over well. Grace Alvarez Sesma is a traditional Mexican healer
who lives in Colorado.
"We
don't need The Walt Disney Company to help us to promote our own culture,"
she said.
Alvarez
Sesma started an online petition against Disney. Hours later it had more
than 14,000 supporters.
Twitter
and Facebook exploded with posts like 'Our culture is not for sale' and
'Keep your corporate hands off.'
By
late afternoon Disney released a statement saying it would withdraw its
"Día de los Muertos" trademark applications.
Gustavo Arellano, author of the
syndicated column "Ask a Mexican," said, "The Latino market is
such that already there were calls for protest, boycotts and all that and
Disney knows better than to poke at the so-called 'sleeping giant.'"
The
term "sleeping giant" was often used during the 2012 presidential
election to describe the Latino voter bloc, credited
with delivering President Barack Obama a victory.
Disney's
official statement said the company will withdraw the trademark filing because
they've determined the title of the Mexican-inspired film will change. A
spokesperson declined further comment.
Since Disney are going nowhere they appear to have completed a successful public-opinion trial as well as heighten brand consciousness.
ReplyDeleteDisney - a fantasy creating firm - awakens the 'sleeping giant' by trying to steal 'The Day of the Dead', what a movie plot.
cheers
Noor, as always, great stuff.
ReplyDeleteHowabout a new word in our vocabulary? "Jewhad"
Can't claim it was me who coined it: http://desertpeace.wordpress.com/2013/05/10/holy-jewhad-declared-against-women-in-jerusalem/