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by TOM KRISHER -- Associated Press posted August 31, 2006

DETROIT -- General Motors Corp. has decided to end its sponsorship of CBS' hit series "Survivor," but the world's largest automaker said Wednesday that the decision had nothing to do with the reality show's controversial decision to divide its contestants in the upcoming season by race and ethnicity.

GM spokeswoman Ryndee S. Carney said the company made the decision in the normal course of making its media buys months ago, before the show made its recent announcement.

"I think it's just a coincidence. I know it's not cause and effect," Carney said.

A group of New York City officials have criticized the new format, saying it promotes divisiveness. They have asked CBS to reconsider its plans.

"How could anybody be so desperate for ratings?" City Councilman John Liu asked last week.

Show creator Mark Burnett said Tuesday that many of those criticizing the new approach haven't ever seen the show and don't understand how it works.

"By putting people in tribes, they clearly have to get rid of people of their own ethnicity," he told The Associated Press during a conference call. "So it's not racial at all."

For the first portion of the 13th edition of "Survivor," which premieres Sept. 14, the contestants competing for the $1 million prize while stranded on the Cook Islands in the South Pacific will be divided into four teams -- blacks, Asians, Hispanics and whites.

GM, which has sponsored "Survivor" since it premiered in May 2000 and was the show's exclusive automotive sponsor, is shifting some of its media dollars from prime-time television to more live sports, awards shows and other big events, Carney said.

The Detroit-based company also decided that its media strategy should feature cars and trucks integrated into shows, which was difficult on "Survivor," she said. Although one episode did feature a Pontiac Aztek, the opportunities for cars and trucks on the show were few, Carney said.

"There's a limited number of possibilities as to how you can integrate a car or truck in a show that people spend their whole time on an island," she said.

CBS spokesman Chris Ender said GM notified the network of its decision long before the new "Survivor" format was announced. He said the company had no knowledge of the competition by race.

"They informed us several months ago that they wouldn't be part of the upcoming season. It's unrelated to the controversy surrounding the upcoming edition," Ender said.

CBS Entertainment, which is part of New York-based CBS Corp., will stick with the format despite the criticism, he said.

Ender would not say if any other sponsors had left the show or if CBS had a replacement for GM.

CBS Entertainment, which is part of New York-based CBS Corp., has defended the ethnic twist, saying it follows the show's tradition of introducing new creative elements and casting structures that reflect cultural and social issues.

Like GM, other advertisers will move more toward integrating their products into shows as more viewers use technology such as digital video recorders to avoid watching commercials, said Robert Thompson, professor of television and popular culture at Syracuse University.

"Advertising is going to have to go back to the early days of television when you had products integrated into the shows themselves," he said.

While he doesn't expect it to happen within five years, the single-spot commercial might eventually disappear, Thompson added.

Posted

What the difference between have races competing against each other and sexs competing against each other? What about other shows that regularly feature men against women? Isn't that sexist? How about beer commercials that show members of all races sitting around a campfire, just to achieve racial balance? Isn't that racial exploitation?

But all of this does prove one thing: the producers of 'Survivor' and its network, CBS, are geniuses. The show's ratings had been down, but now everybody will be watching due to the controversy. Who will win: Not GM.

Posted

I can see why GM is doing this and I hope it's not because of the new Survivor format. I stopped watching the show after the third season, I think, and it is past stale now, bordering on moldy (yet another island?). Its viewership has gone down considerably, I believe, and there are bigger and better shows to advertise during.

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