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Ikea Revisits Gay Couples, While Southwest
Airlines, Sears and Sprint Enter Market
By Michael Wilke November 11,
2006
Swedish home furnishing
retailer Ikea made worldwide news in 1994 for its U.S. commercial
featuring a male couple buying furniture together. The company has
returned to its roots with a new spot including another gay pair,
this time with a child.
Following a rainbow of families, the black and Asian male couple
are joined by their Golden Retriever and daughter, snuggled in
domestic bliss. An ending voiceover asks: "Why shouldn't sofas come
in flavors, just like families?"
Ikea spokeswoman Mona Liss says, "Home is the most important
place in the world, it's the place where we grow our families,
however we define family. That includes the people you choose to
live with, and the friends and pets you choose to bring in."
The campaign for Ikea, which has 34 U.S. stores in the U.S., was
created by advertising agency Deutsch. The commercial airs on
national cable networks and future versions will focus on other
rooms of the home. However, no ads will appear in gay media -- a
place the company has never advertised in.
The first Ikea spot with a white male gay couple, also from
Deutsch, was groundbreaking. It was part of a series showing
non-nuclear, non-traditional families, including a biracial
opposite-sex couple and a single mom. The male couple ad showed them
shopping together and discussing how they met, with one finishing
the other's sentence like married couples do. One of the two actors
was even actually gay, but it aired only once before being pulled --
for safety reasons. One of its American stores received bomb threats
due to the commercial.
"We knew it was going to be a polarizing decision but we thought
it was the right one," notes President/Chief Creative Officer of
Deutsch, Kathy Delaney, about the 1994 commercial.
It was easier over how to portray a same-sex couple the second
time around, 12 years later. "I would say the first time there was
more discussion about 'Is it over the top, Is it accurate?' "
Delaney says. This time there was "not even a debate" to include the
male couple again. "It was sort of a no-brainer, gays are part of
the world we live in." She adds that when casting the men, "we went
with the people we felt were right," and that their mixed races was
incidental.
Globally, Ikea has a long history of including gay and
transgender themes in its advertising, with over 20 examples, though
not always from an inclusive approach.
In 1999, a remarkable Spanish Ikea spot depicts a woman in a
hospital who has just undergone gender reassignment surgery from
being a man, with the theme "Redecorate Your Life." The same year in
Germany, a foldaway couch is opened to reveal two men in bed
together. In 2001, a stereotyped male couple fights War of the Roses
style in a British spot, while an American spot shows a man opening
a fortune cookie that says love is in front of him -- an overweight
man.
Even more gay themed ads from Ikea appeared worldwide in 2002. A
print ad in The Netherlands showed a girl and her two daddies, one
kissing the other on the cheek. A Filipino print ad in the campaign
showed a shirtless man popping out of the closet to another
shirtless man. An Australian TV spot has a woman conclude her date
is gay because his apartment is so well decorated. A French
commercial shows a woman applying her makeup, then walks into a
table and lets out a male grunt.
AFA NOTE: This web page is
reproduced to show Sears support for the homosexual cable network
Logo. While other companies are mentioned in the article, AFA
is focusing on Sears only at this time.
Sears, Southwest Airlines, Bally and Sprint Enter the Gay
Fray
A host of new advertisers have entered the gay market recently.
The year-old gay cable channel from MTV Networks, LOGO, has
introduced Sears Brands, Sprint Nextel and Bally Total Fitness to
gay viewers in the last several months, while viewers of the channel
on Time Warner in New York City have also seen Weight Watchers
International and Subway restaurants.
A Sears spokeswoman says the company doesn't comment on its
advertising strategies. By contrast, segment market manager at
Southwest Airlines Jena Atchison was practically bursting to talk
about what her company was up to. The airline entered The Advocate
with custom gay creative showing same-sex couples embracing and
holding hands under the headline, "We've been a great travel partner
for over 35 years." The work came from Southwest's ad agency
GSD&M, Austin.
Southwest took action after it carried a less-than-expected score
from the Human Rights Campaign's annual Corporate Equality Index
look at company GLBT policies and behavior. "Based on our culture,
we were surprised, it was a great learning tool for us," says
Atchison, who is lesbian and a six-year employee. "You can't just
say, 'Here we are' and expect everyone to love you." Southwest
formed a team of 20 gay and lesbian employees across departments to
address the HRC score and marketing.
While she notes there is more work to be done (the HRC score is
now 86), Atchison says, "We didn't just want to tap into the gay
market, we wanted to satisfy them."
AFA NOTE: This web page is
reproduced to show Sears support for the homosexual cable network
Logo. While other companies are mentioned in the article, AFA
is focusing on Sears only at this time.
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