| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE NOVEMBER 21, 2003 3:15 PM | CONTACT: Center for Science in the Public Interest Newsroom: 202-332-9110 |
Crass commercialism is rampant across the Smithsonian, said George A. Hacker, director of CSPIs alcohol policies project. But Bud Lights presence in the Air and Space Museum sends the wrong message about beer to the millions of impressionable youths who visit the museum each year. Museums are no place for beer ads.
An e-mail from a Smithsonian official to key congressional staff people implies that the plane is in the collection primarily because of the fame it gained on the air-show circuit, when it was sponsored by Bud Light: The artifact in question is an aerobatic plane that became famous at air shows, during which time it was sponsored by Anheuser Busch and carried the Bud Light logo. In an earlier phase of its career, it also broke several records, the official wrote.
But according to CSPI, that official is deliberately inverting the historical significance of the planes titles. When Smithsonian curators first made the case for adding the plane to the collection they only cited the planes aerobatic titles and design as the reason for its inclusion. A memo to the museums collection committee makes no mention of air shows, and even the planes description on the NASM web site makes only passing reference to its air show career.
"Whats next? The Coors Light Lunar Lander? The Smirnoff Shuttle? asked Hacker. The Smithsonian should have clear guidelines that prohibit alcoholic-beverage and tobacco companies from plastering their logos on objects of historical significance accepted into the museums collections. The Smithsonians damage control verges on dishonesty when they pretend this planes impressive titles are just an afterthought compared to its career as a flying Bud Light ad.
Earlier this week, 20 members of Congress told the Smithsonian Secretary Lawrence M. Small that the Bud Light logos on the plane needlessly commercialize the planes exhibition while marginalizing its true historical significance.
According to a recent national telephone survey commissioned by CSPI, 77 percent of respondents oppose the Smithsonians policy of accepting aviation exhibits that promote beer brands. That poll has a margin of error of plus or minus four percent.
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