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Tina Turner

Do you want Tina Turner back?

  • Yes...

    Votes: 70 68.0%
  • No...

    Votes: 33 32.0%

  • Total voters
    103
Messages
13,914
The following was published by the Sydney Morning Herald -

Opinion
Why a guy with a sax gets more airtime than five successful NRL clubs

by Malcolm Knox
Sports columnist
March 6, 2020 — 11.10am

Drawn in like a moth to the flames of controversy around the National Rugby League’s promotional advertisement for the 2020 season, I was expecting images of Latrell Mitchell dancing on a burning Australian flag amid scenes of wild lesbian abandon. Political correctness not so much gone mad as gone on an end-of-season footy trip. To the thudding backbeat of league dinosaurs keeling over and hitting the floor.

It turned out to be much more interesting.

With these campaigns a sport is revealing the values it wishes to project. It is telling us what it thinks of itself – or in league’s case, what it is trying very hard to think of itself. The two-minute video has been equally praised and criticised for wearing its progressive colours on it sleeve, showing Mitchell wrapped in the Aboriginal flag, Karina Brown and Vanessa Foliaki kissing after an Origin game, and Macklemore singing Same Love at the 2017 grand final. There is a bookend story of generations of kids inspired by the game, even if Tina Turner’s Simply the Best…Still…Again…Really?’ carries a tacit admission that in 30 years the code has yet to come up with a musical advance on that weary grandmother of all soundtracks.

When the 116-second ad is broken down into its 42 scenes, some uncomfortable anomalies emerge. The Brown-Foliaki kiss and Macklemore occupy a combined two seconds. The total exposure given to the women’s game, through a vignette of Ali Brigginshaw, is six seconds. Yet two glimpses of "social engineering" and transgressions of the "Go woke, go broke" rule, which take up less space than archival shots of Tina and some random guy playing a saxophone, were enough to give old men heart attacks.

If they want something to worry about, they should not be looking at what was put into the ad, but what was left out.

Inclusion first. Of the NRL’s 16 clubs, the serious airtime goes to South Sydney and Newcastle. Souths remain the pride of the league in this concoction. Here are the Souths fans marching in 2000 to get their team back (from the same NRL that kicked them out – what a masterstroke!). And here is the reborn Rabbitoh Latrell Mitchell, his somewhat confused tantrum with the Roosters transformed into a symbolism to tug on the strings of the uncommitted heart. The long image of Mitchell standing in the water, wrapped in the flag, with a girl singing about how he’s better than all the rest, is the advertisement’s money shot. This is the NRL saying it is better than the AFL, which, far from turning Adam Goodes into a hero, turned its back. It’s a brave gambit in its way, not entirely credible but a conversation starter, which is what the league will have wanted.

Newcastle are celebrated through their win in 1997 when BHP was pulling out of town, an ersatz revival of rugby league’s working-class origins. It’s a manufactured nostalgia, given what has happened to the Knights since. Tellingly, the other Newcastle clip is of Andrew Johns returning home after the 2001 grand final, the party already having started. Twenty years on, the Knights’ hangover persists.

If we’re keeping score of airtime, Souths and Newcastle top the table with 14 seconds’ exposure each. The two clubs on the next echelon, with eight seconds, are Manly and Canberra, curious choices perhaps, but again purely symbolic. The Sea Eagles are the Trbojevic brothers, meaning league is about family. It’s a surprise to think of Manly, that never-ending feud, as a family club, but if Tom can be shown in the ad playing backyard footy during the Super League split in mid-1996, before he was born, then anything is possible. As for the Raiders, there is a moment of Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad in the gym with Jarrod Croker and a split-second of Mal, but they’re there for the Viking clap: it’s a fans’ game. Notably, the Viking crowd are in a street, not a stadium. Most other fans portrayed in the ad are in pubs (and most of those, in these pubs, are women). The game’s significant moments are seen on TV sets. All of which is to glide past the empty stands each weekend and acknowledge that rugby league is, in its heart, a television sport.


So that’s what’s in. What, and who, is out?

Rugby league – the game – is out. Of the 116 seconds in this ad, just 14 seconds are given to the jewel in the NRL’s crown, the players in action. That bare minimum of football is reduced to iconic moments worn out by overuse: the Scott Sattler tackle in the 2003 grand final, the Benji Marshall flick pass in 2005, the Johnathan Thurston field goal in 2015. It’s league for people who have a passing interest in league.

Normally, season-opening campaigns are about giving a nod to the fans of all the clubs, but this one is conspicuous for how many clubs are virtually cut out. That long shot of Latrell Mitchell standing in the water takes more airtime than is given to Melbourne, the Roosters, the Bulldogs, the Panthers, the Broncos, the Eels, the Sharks and the Dragons combined. The Warriors and Titans get five seconds of old footage between them. The Eels get three seconds of Clint Gutherson and Mitchell Moses in a dark tunnel. The Broncos and Sharks get a split-second each of podium celebration. The Roosters, repeat premiers, are on screen for just two seconds, and half of that is an Arthur Beetson mural. The Dragons get three seconds of Tyson Frizell training and a subliminal flash of Ben Hornby raising the 2010 premiership trophy. The poor old Dogs? One second of people (in a pub, of course) watching Hazem El Masri break the pointscoring record in 2009. That takes longer to read than the Bulldogs actually get in the ad.

Five of the six most supported clubs in the NRL are given less exposure than the guy playing the sax.

What does this mean? For all the storytelling about inclusion, it’s the exclusions that tell the story. The NRL is telling us what it doesn’t want to celebrate. By excluding its three most successful clubs of the past 30 years – Brisbane, Melbourne, Roosters – it blanks out the abject failure of the salary cap system. By excluding the Warriors and Titans, it skirts past the ruin of its expansion ambitions. By excluding its heartland in western and southern Sydney, and by excluding game action – the athleticism, the skill and also the violence - it draws attention to a deep ambivalence about itself, how it doesn’t seem quite to know what to do with the core of what it is. The advertisement, then, accidentally provides a perfect snapshot of the NRL in 2020: leading the field on identity politics and reconciliation, but still struggling to reconcile itself with its identity.
 

Hoofhearted

Juniors
Messages
723
I've sat back and watched all the commenting and cross examination of the ad since its release and have found it hilarious how people are managing to analyse it to death. I was going to make a comment about how everyone is carrying on like children and just get over it, its just an ad. But then I watched on yesterday as my son put the ad on for the first time, totally oblivious to all the 'controversy' going on. He is 14yo and a massive Tigers fan, he sat there and watched the ad, turned around and said 'How cool was that, what day do the Tigers play next week', then simply walked out of the room.
So to say that everyone is carrying on like children would be an insult to children, because they have it right.
 

jimmee007

Juniors
Messages
660
I think while the ad has faults, it’s done it’s job perfectly.

Everyone in here like me is a rusted on rugby league fan (trolls included). I know the first game is next week and what time each game is and who is playing who.

This has raised significantly more awareness that the season is starting and being spoken about in wider circles than rugby league community. That in itself is a good thing if we want to grow the game.
 

unforgiven

Bench
Messages
3,138
I heard radio ads all day using the Still Simply the Best and Still Creating History taglines today. Each ad discusses a key moment in the last 30 years such as the 97 GF and then uses both taglines and states the season starts March 12. Good ads I thought!
 

TheFrog

Coach
Messages
14,300
they’ll no longer need to “do this” when middle aged white men stop being outraged at two women kissing or someone celebrating their culture. Might be a while yet going by some of the sht the usual media mouth pieces and red necks on social media have come out with.
Has there ever been a man and a woman kissing on an NRL ad? I don't care what people do in private but it's being beamed into my loungeroom.
 

Timmah

LeagueUnlimited News Editor
Staff member
Messages
100,887
Has there ever been a man and a woman kissing on an NRL ad? I don't care what people do in private but it's being beamed into my loungeroom.
I'd love to know when kissing was designated as a private activity.
 

Xcalibre

Juniors
Messages
2,368
https://www.smh.com.au/sport/butche...age-over-nrl-ad-revealed-20200304-p546wk.html


'Butchered, terrible': Singo's barrage over NRL ad revealed
Roy MastersMarch 5, 2020 — 11.32am
The NRL’s new commercial has prompted Sydney’s iconic adman John Singleton to say “Rugby League Central should be run by the Anti-Discrimination Board”.

His comments are in reference to the two-minute brand film promoting the code’s progressive stance on diversity and inclusion by showcasing gender equity, indigenous pride and same-sex relationships.

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The NRL advertisement for the 2020 season.NRL

The NRL’s re-creation of the Tina Turner campaign, using images over the past 30 years, prompted Singo to text: “Simply the Best has been Butchered. Great waste of opportunity. Terrible.”

Of two female players kissing at the end of a State of Origin match, Singo observed, “Will help get Qantas on board.”

Well, Singo did once hold the Qantas account; and the airline's chief executive, Alan Joyce, has been a strong promoter of gay rights. And the NRL doesn’t get the favours from carrier Qantas the AFL does from rival Virgin.



2020 NRL marketing campaign featuring Tina Turner


This year marks the 30th anniversary of the NRL campaign.

But that’s the only positive, according to the 78-year-old.

“It will fail on every other count.”

Now, Singo’s texts require such a degree of deciphering that I often lament the closing of Bletchley Park where the German Enigma code was cracked in World War II.

Related Article

So, have a go at the following (where I have inserted linking words and punctuation): “Great ads take great talent. Rare, beautiful or ugly. Try (to) shift perceptions (and) thus (create) sales. (But) Changing perception from what to what? Bigger float in Mardi Gras?

“The league have managed to put this new commercial in the same class as poor Thomas telling the ref to blow that whistle.”

The last point is a reference to celebrated author Thomas Keneally appearing in a cost-conscious commercial to promote the start of the 1999 season, only a couple of years after the end of the Super League war.

Keneally, a Manly fan, was filmed on a Sydney beach opening the season with, “We all start equal” (hello Broncos!). Tom ended the pitch declaring, “Blow that whistle, ref. Send that ball soaring.”

Tom takes a polar opposite view to Singo on the NRL’s 2020 promotional campaign, saying, “I’m in favour in that rugby league is fostering its heritage. The occasional glimpses of Latrell (Mitchell) draped in the indigenous flag and two girls kissing have excited those who say it is the height of LGBT in your face-edness. But overall, the ad demonstrates a great sense of the heritage of the game.

“However, I’m not sure the little girl running out of the tunnel at the end of the ad is going to be a future Cameron Smith and captain Australia.”

Well, if it’s Cameron Smith’s younger daughter, Matilda, she could. Many a time, I have sat in the Storm dressing room after a home match and marvelled at the skills of the Smith and Slater siblings as they play touch football on the thin carpet covering the concrete floor. Matilda possesses talents well beyond her years.

Living in Melbourne, she is a chance of becoming an AFL champion, although Keneally draws a different comparison with the southern code, referencing the booing of Swans player Adam Goodes and the NRL campaign’s focus on Mitchell, who some perceive to be a divisive character.

“I think the NRL are doing it better than the AFL,” he said.

“Rugby league tries not to be partisan.

“What happened to Adam Goodes in AFL would not happen to an indigenous champion in the NRL and senior commentators in the NRL wouldn’t have done to an Adam Goodes what senior commentators did to him in the AFL.”

Keneally, 84, believes he is eminently qualified to compare the 1999 and 2020 promotional campaigns.

“As principal of the worst ad ever made, I am pleased to see this one.

“It delivers a great sense of Australian heritage. This should have happened years ago. The NRL missed their opportunity when the Broncos weren’t called the Brumbies and the Cowboys weren’t called the Drovers.

Related Article

“Rugby league is the only game in town for us old guys, as the younger ones have a myriad of entertainment options.”

Well, I’m one of Tom and Singo’s generation who young people think still wind watches, strop straight razors and drink hot tea from the saucer. I am on Keneally’s side.

Singo, however, compares the resurrection of the Tina Turner anthem with cricket bringing back last December the 1978 Mojo commercial, “C’mon, Aussie, C’mon” to celebrate women in the sport.

“The Mojo ad was brought back about the same time. Great. Still,” he texted.

“Not social engineering.”
 

Xcalibre

Juniors
Messages
2,368
https://www.foxsports.com.au/afl/now-this-is-simply-the-best-afls-brilliant-ad-to-hype-up-season-2020/news-story/9277bfeab307033778e5ae23bb3b0324

Now THAT’S how you do it: Why AFL season ad is simply the best
The AFL has unveiled a spectacular new ad for the 2020 season, just days after the NRL copped criticism over its own campaign.
  • March 6, 2020 2:19pm
  • by Fox Sports
  • Source: FOX SPORTS
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The AFL has released its new ‘Believe’ ad campaign ahead of the 2020 season.Source: FOX SPORTS
Centered around one word - Believe - the AFL’s campaign is a fresh spin on the 2018 slogan, 'Don't Believe In Never'. WATCH THE AD BELOW

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AFL's 2020 season promo

0:55
Watch every match of every round of the 2020 Toyota AFL Premiership Season LIVE & On-Demand with KAYO. New to Kayo? Get your 14-day free trial & start streaming instantly >

The 2018 ads featured three major stories of adversity - Richmond's breakthrough 2017 premiership, Swan Aliir Aliir's journey from a Kenyan refugee camp to the AFL, and Dema, a teenager playing in a multicultural team in western Sydney.

This year, the advertisement features clips from fans emulating their favourite footy stars producing some of the biggest moments of the 2019 season, such as Essendon star Anthony McDonald-Tipungwuti’s matchwinner against North Melbourne.

It also uses clips of Nick Riewoldt ‘performing’ as Freddie Mercury before the Big Freeze At The ‘G, as well as MND ambassador Neale Daniher’s emotional speech to Melbourne players before that game on Queen’s Birthday.

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Nick Riewoldt's 'performance' as Freddie Mercury at the Big Freeze features in the new ad.Source: Supplied
The ad concludes with Lance Franklin winking, before the phrase ‘Don’t Believe In Never’ appears, then having several words scratched out leaving simply ‘Believe’.

The AFL campaign is unlikely to draw the same criticism the NRL received when they released their renewed ‘Simply The Best’ video earlier this week.

Celebrating 30 years since the original campaign involving Tina Turner, fans pointed out several factual flaws in the commercial involving teams and dates.

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Simply the Best - Revived

2:03
The NRL has since moved to change certain elements of the ad.
 

Xcalibre

Juniors
Messages
2,368
Yet which ad is everyone talking about. If it wasn't for that article I wouldn't even know of the AFL one. Not one person has an opinion on it yet the NRL one is talked about by everyone.

So, which ad is better?

The one that doesn’t turn off a large proportion of it’s fans?

I didn’t know about the afl ad before either, but it came up when looking at nrl news. I don’t give a shit about AFL.

NRL is the only sport I really enjoy watching other than MLB, so the ad doesn’t make me want to watch more as I’ve been anticipating the start to the season for weeks.
 
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