Nike's long history of courting controversy through advertising - Action News
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Nike's long history of courting controversy through advertising

Nike ads are about making money, but some have also bled over into social commentary like the new Colin Kaepernick spot. It's the latest Nike ad to dabble in social commentary.

Use of social commentary in ad campaigns dates back to the 1990s

The decision to feature football player Colin Kaepernick in its new ad campaign is part of a long history at Nike of mixing advertising and messages of social justice (Marcio Jose Sanchez/Associated Press)

Nike adsare about making money,but some have also bled over into social commentary likethe new Colin Kaepernickspot.

The NFL quarterback a household name since he first "took a knee" in protest during the U.S. national anthem is now also the face of Nike's "Just Do It" campaign as it marks its 30th anniversary.

It's a move the sportswear makerhad to know would spark controversy and attract a lot of attention. Nike has, after all, dabbled in social commentary before.

February 1995:Nike featured an HIV-positive long-distance runner in an earlier "Just Do It"campaign.Over images of RicMunoz running over trails with beautiful views, backed by a swelling musical score, the viewer learns heran about 128 kilometres a weekand 10 marathons a year. The reveal that he is also HIV positive doesn't come until the very end.

AIDS activists applauded the ad, saying it helped remove some of the stigma by portraying someone with the disease in a normal, everyday light."It's very healthy," SeanStrub,publisher and executive editor of Poz, a magazine about AIDS and HIV, told the New York Times."It breaks down the wall of 'otherness.'"

The ad ran on TV around the world. A Nike spokesperson said at the time that the company knew it would elicit a strong response, "but we wouldn't want it to be one of pity, rather one of understanding about what determination really is." Nike's ad director also told the Times that the company heard plenty of complaints, including that"no one, including Nike, should talk about [AIDS] publicly."

August 1995:Another "Just Do It" ad, written and produced by women, was aimed directly at women and girls. CalledIf You Let Me Play Sports,the 30-second sport featured young girls describing how sports can maketheir lives better quoting statistics abouthealthier liveswith less depression, less chance of unplanned pregnancyand a greater probability that they would leave an abusive partner.

The national secretary of the National Organization for Women, KarenJohnson, calledit significant. "Building self-esteem is critical to a girl's health," she told the Spokesman-Review in Spokane, Wash.

Critics suggested the message was overly simplified. "There's a sense of depicting the lot of all women as being fairly miserable, and that somehow being allowed to play sports is a cure-all for that,"Dorothy Leland, the director of Florida Atlantic University's Women's Studies Center told the Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel.

February 2017: Nike released Equality,which featuredblack sports greats including LeBron James, Serena Williams, Gabby Douglasand Kevin Durant.The addebuted during the 2017 Grammy Awards broadcast, and featured Michael B. Jordan talking of the parallels between equality in sport and equality in the broader world.

"The ball should bounce the same for everyone," he says. "If we can be equals here, we can be equals everywhere."

The ad came with a commitment from Nike to donate$5 million to U.S. organizations that work to advance equality.

March 2017: Nike featuredfive MiddleEastern women who pushed social norms to succeed in sports in What Will They Say About You?The digital spot shows the women, some in hijabs, drawing disdainful looks from passerby as they run, skateboard and box. "What," a female voicewonders in Arabic, "will they think?

"Will it be that you don'tbelong, that it's unladylike, or that you're not built for this? Maybe. But it also goes on to say that just maybethey will think instead that you are strong, and can't be stopped, and that you make it look easy." It ends on a message of hope for the future over a little girl, just starting out on her figure skates.

The campaign came out oneyear before Nike launched its hijab line of sportswear.Nike releasedsimilarads under the same theme in Russia, Turkeyand the Middle East.

In the wake of the Kaepernick ad, some are questioning whether Nike is using its advertising to truly send a message, or simply for financial gain. Author and journalist Anand Giridharadas says some companies simply "sidle up to social justice to essentially rebrand themselves on the cheap."

Author and journalistAnandGiridharadas questions Nike's motivation for the Kaepernick spot:

Author Anand Giridharadas questions Nike's motivation for using Colin Kaepernick in its ad

6 years ago
Duration 1:02
Author Anand Giridharadas questions Nike's motivation for using Colin Kaepernick in its ad