May 4, 2012
Recently we specifically targeted Darden Restaurants – Red Lobster and Olive Garden – because of their frequent sponsorship of shows such as “Don’t Trust the B—- in Apt. 23” and “GCB.” After withdrawing for one week, Red Lobster was back on this week’s episode of “Don’t Trust the B—- in Apt. 23.” Also returning was regular sponsor PepsiCo – this time advertising their Sierra Mist and Gatorade products. Additional repeat offenders include Old Navy, Mazda, Honda, and AT&T.
These corporations need to hear from you!
Take Action! Click here to send a message to all the advertisers empowering this offensive show.
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May 1, 2012
By Chris Johnson
Writing about Seth MacFarlane’s shows on Fox TV at this point is about as formulaic as Seth MacFarlane’s jokes. Unfortunately, however, until he stops repackaging the same inappropriate, offensive jokes, he needs to be called out on it.
MacFarlane’s predictable brand of “humor” consists of finding a subject that is pretty widely recognized as serious or sacred and creating a cartoon character to joke about it, thereby making the offended party the punch line. His trinity of shows (three in timeslot, one in essence) are the television equivalent of a whoopee cushion at a funeral. The prankster may laugh at everyone else’s expense, but he’s still the idiot in the room.
Take Action! Click here to send a message to the corporations that empowered this latest offensive trash on Fox TV.
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April 30, 2012
By Lisa Van Houten
ABC’s “GCB” returned last night after being preempted last week. “GCB” finished in last place in overall network ratings for its timeslot with 5.7 million viewers.
Take Action! Click here to send a message to the corporations that align with the mocking of Christianity on “GCB.”
Returning advertisers include: Ace Hardware, Subway, Vaseline, Honda, Overstock.com, L’Oreal. New advertisers include Applebee’s. All detergent, Bank of America, and Resolve Spray-N-Wash.
Sadly, even though the show came in last, “GCB” had its best ratings in five weeks. Add up the number of Christians in America and 5.7 million should seem like a paltry number in comparison.
So why is a show that ridicules the Christian faith still on the air? Why wasn’t the show immediately yanked in response to a loud chorus of protest from American Christians?
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