Budweiser seeks removal from 'Flight'

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Denzel Washington's character in "Flight" drinks a lot throughout the film, but his portrayal of a highly functioning alcoholic pilot isn't going down well with brewing company Anheuser-Busch or the distributor of Stolichnaya vodka.
Anheuser-Busch said Monday that it has asked Paramount Pictures Corp. to obscure or remove the Budweiser logo from the film, which at one point shows Washington's character drinking the beer while behind the wheel.
Budweiser is hardly the only alcoholic beverage shown in "Flight," which earned $25 million in its debut weekend and is likely to remain popular with audiences. Washington's character frequently drinks vodka throughout the film, with several different brands represented. William Grant & Sons, which distributes Stolichnaya in the United States, also said it didn't license its brand for inclusion in the film and wouldn't have given permission if asked.
Although product placement, where companies pay producers to have their brands seen on-camera, have become ubiquitous in movies and television, experts say studios are not obligated to get permission before featuring a product in their work.
Rob McCarthy, vice president of Budweiser, wrote in a statement to The Associated Press that the company wasn't contacted by Paramount or the production company of director Robert Zemeckis for permission to use the beer in "Flight."
"We would never condone the misuse of our products, and have a long history of promoting responsible drinking and preventing drunk driving," McCarthy wrote. "We have asked the studio to obscure the Budweiser trademark in current digital copies of the movie and on all subsequent adaptations of the film, including DVD, On Demand, streaming and additional prints not yet distributed to theaters."
A spokesman for Zemeckis referred questions to Paramount, which did not return an email message seeking comment.
James Curich, a spokesman for Stoli distributor William Grant & Sons, said the company has a strict code for how the vodka is portrayed in films and is committed to marketing it responsibly. "Considering the subject matter of this film, it is not something in which we would have participated," he wrote in an email.
Despite the companies' dissatisfaction with their inclusion in the film, experts say there is little they can do about it legally.
Trademark laws "don't exist to give companies the right to control and censor movies and TV shows that might happen to include real-world items," said Daniel Nazer, a resident fellow at Stanford Law School's Fair Use Project. "It is the case that often filmmakers get paid by companies to include their products. I think that's sort of led to a culture where they expect they'll have control. That's not a right the trademark law gives them."
Jay Dougherty, a professor at Loyola Law School, said the use of brands in films has generally been protected by the courts, even when the companies aren't pleased with the portrayals.
"It wouldn't have been as effective a film if they used a bunch of non-generic brands," said Dougherty, who is also the director of the school's Entertainment & Media Law Institute. "In a normal situation, if the alcohol were just there as a smaller part of the movie, they might have created an artificial brand for it."
Other vodka brands, including Absolut and Smirnoff, are also included in the film. Representatives of those companies did not return messages seeking comment.
Paramount has some experience with a company upset with its inclusion in a film. In 2003 the studio won a case after the makers of the "Slip 'N Slide" sued over the use of the product in the film "Dickie Roberts: Former Child Star."
In that case, a court found that requiring Paramount to alter the film and its marketing would "generate more hardship than it alleviates."
Dougherty and Mark Partridge, a Chicago intellectual property lawyer, also noted that a court rejected an effort to get by Caterpillar Inc. to get its logo removed from tractors driven by the villains in 2003's "George of the Jungle 2." The company had argued its trademark was harmed by having its product associated with the film's villains.
Partridge said with the explosion of product placement in recent years, a company might try to make an argument that by the brand appearing in a film, the audience assumed it had granted permission. "You'd have to have proof that people actually making an association and believing it was authorized," he said.
"It might be a different world," he said, adding, "I still think it's an uphill haul."
Anheuser-Busch said Monday that it has asked Paramount Pictures Corp. to obscure or remove the Budweiser logo from the film, which at one point shows Washington's character drinking the beer while behind the wheel.
Budweiser is hardly the only alcoholic beverage shown in "Flight," which earned $25 million in its debut weekend and is likely to remain popular with audiences. Washington's character frequently drinks vodka throughout the film, with several different brands represented. William Grant & Sons, which distributes Stolichnaya in the United States, also said it didn't license its brand for inclusion in the film and wouldn't have given permission if asked.
Although product placement, where companies pay producers to have their brands seen on-camera, have become ubiquitous in movies and television, experts say studios are not obligated to get permission before featuring a product in their work.
Rob McCarthy, vice president of Budweiser, wrote in a statement to The Associated Press that the company wasn't contacted by Paramount or the production company of director Robert Zemeckis for permission to use the beer in "Flight."
"We would never condone the misuse of our products, and have a long history of promoting responsible drinking and preventing drunk driving," McCarthy wrote. "We have asked the studio to obscure the Budweiser trademark in current digital copies of the movie and on all subsequent adaptations of the film, including DVD, On Demand, streaming and additional prints not yet distributed to theaters."
A spokesman for Zemeckis referred questions to Paramount, which did not return an email message seeking comment.
James Curich, a spokesman for Stoli distributor William Grant & Sons, said the company has a strict code for how the vodka is portrayed in films and is committed to marketing it responsibly. "Considering the subject matter of this film, it is not something in which we would have participated," he wrote in an email.
Despite the companies' dissatisfaction with their inclusion in the film, experts say there is little they can do about it legally.
Trademark laws "don't exist to give companies the right to control and censor movies and TV shows that might happen to include real-world items," said Daniel Nazer, a resident fellow at Stanford Law School's Fair Use Project. "It is the case that often filmmakers get paid by companies to include their products. I think that's sort of led to a culture where they expect they'll have control. That's not a right the trademark law gives them."
Jay Dougherty, a professor at Loyola Law School, said the use of brands in films has generally been protected by the courts, even when the companies aren't pleased with the portrayals.
"It wouldn't have been as effective a film if they used a bunch of non-generic brands," said Dougherty, who is also the director of the school's Entertainment & Media Law Institute. "In a normal situation, if the alcohol were just there as a smaller part of the movie, they might have created an artificial brand for it."
Other vodka brands, including Absolut and Smirnoff, are also included in the film. Representatives of those companies did not return messages seeking comment.
Paramount has some experience with a company upset with its inclusion in a film. In 2003 the studio won a case after the makers of the "Slip 'N Slide" sued over the use of the product in the film "Dickie Roberts: Former Child Star."
In that case, a court found that requiring Paramount to alter the film and its marketing would "generate more hardship than it alleviates."
Dougherty and Mark Partridge, a Chicago intellectual property lawyer, also noted that a court rejected an effort to get by Caterpillar Inc. to get its logo removed from tractors driven by the villains in 2003's "George of the Jungle 2." The company had argued its trademark was harmed by having its product associated with the film's villains.
Partridge said with the explosion of product placement in recent years, a company might try to make an argument that by the brand appearing in a film, the audience assumed it had granted permission. "You'd have to have proof that people actually making an association and believing it was authorized," he said.
"It might be a different world," he said, adding, "I still think it's an uphill haul."
Do they think their customers are going stop drinking the swill because it was in a film?
Budweiser can have 3 frogs coraking on tv, but when it comes to a fictional movie, they don't like it.
Budweiser just got a ton of free publicity stating they don't want to be in a blockbuster movie (which I'm sure they already knew about prior to its release).Â
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Well played, Budweiser, well played.
"We would never condone the misuse of our products, and have a long history of promoting responsible drinking and preventing drunk driving"
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Well, neither does the movie! Â The movie isn't making it look like a good thing that the alcohol is being misused. Quite the opposite in fact.
What would they like a character to drink if they were portraying someone who is getting drunk??
 @USN Miller.  Makes the competition look bad instead. Â
@USN Boonsfarm!
 @USN Schlitz, probably.
Funny. Â Coming up next, Marlboro wants to be removed from a movie about a person suffering from lung cancer.
Budweiser can suck it now that they're not even American owned.
Love how they are trying to hide the fact that their products get abused.
I can't believe people even drink Budweiser. There's a ton of good craft beers out there...
More corporate whining about something meaningless...
I can see a new money maker for the film industry: reverse product placement, meaning you pay us for NOT featuring your product ;-)
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BTW, I don't think anyone is entitled to have its products excluded from movies. Can you imagine phantasy brands for everything that is not authorized? Ridiculous.Â
@Komo Dragon I was just thinking the same thing. Is that my line of clothing that villian is wearing? That thief in the movie is wearing Nike shoes! Did they just inappropriately use a post-it? That character is addicted to Vicodin, that's not how I intended it to be used! Every lawyer on point...
 @Komo DragonÂ
I don't think there is anything legally Bud can do as the product is available to the public and anyone can purchase it and take their picture with it. There is no law against that! The product was used in the manner that it was intended and was not portrayed in a negative manner other than what it is. Period.......Bud, ask very nicely.....but I'm sure they will tell you to go pound sand......
When I saw this film it made me think. Not about Budweiser but about the problem. They must be feeling guilty.
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So much for "this Buds for you" nonsense...
Do you think the alcoholic wanted to be an alcoholic? No. Fact is they put out a product that cost our society a lot of money as well as personal issues with many. In short you canât have your cake and eat it too. Hopefully this film makes the owners of their companies realize it isnât all pretty. This film really hits a home run with the reality of alcoholism and they don't like what they see.
 @just_sayin68 You could really say the same thing for Duncan Hines. For some people, having their cake and eating it too, turns into an addiction and you can see that evidence everywhere. It's not the product, it's the person with the addiction problem whether it be alcohol, cigarettes or Twinkies.
Talk about hypocrisy. It's okay to show 22 year old models laughing and enjoying themselves on beer commercials but not the potential sad results of a life of drinking 20 years later. Obviously it's about sales to them, because showing what happens when the product is abused should be part of the cautionary message of alcoholism.
 @Reality Control I haven't watched the movie yet but just think, Bud could always look at the bright side where as the slightly drunk pilot maneuvered that plane so well(maybe better than if he was sober) that it saved lives. Okay that was certainly not saying that people drive/fly better drunk but just giving Bud another way to look at it. LOLOLOLOLOL
Budwieser is the Number One Brand of Beer in the US, and now they don't like the fact that their product leads to Alcoholism? Take Responsibility Budwieser! Many Alcoholics have hit bottom while paying you profits, and you have never complained with the fact that Alcoholics are purchasing your brand, becuase you thrive on the profits.
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Now that it has become public, you go public trying to get your name out of the movie.....Total irresponsibilty of Budwieser comes through! Maybe you should spend more on supporting drinking responsibly and get help if you think you are drinking to much........I hope you start getting slapped with Sin Tax as Cigarettes did.........If the general public only understood the effects of Alcholism in the US........The cost on society is $2.65 per every drink served, from a recent AG study released last year. It's a shame that you sell a beer for $2.00 and then society has to pay $2.65 for that beer due to the issues it causes to peoples health.
 @dinkersink That is bunk. People need to TAKE RESPONSOBILIY  for their own actions not the alcohol, firearms, or tobacco companies. Bud, nor any other company that makes alcoholic beverages is responsible for people becoming alcoholics! Who is the heck is forcing them to drink? No one but themselves. People need to quit blaming everyone else for their actions and start taking responsibility for themselves, their kids and family.How easy it is for you to blame somone else for your own actions, that of their kids or other family members. You are correct that it will in the long run affect society, but that still DOES NOT make it the fault of the companies that produce these products. Irresponsible human beings are at fault!
 @tshirt Duncan Hines, Pillsbury and all of the other food brands need to feel so horribly ashamed that their products make many people fat. Hahahaha I couldn't help it. I agree with you completely. It's not the company, it's our own personal responsibility for OUR LIVES.
@tshirt, please share with me your expertise in speaking on behalf of Alcoholics? Your comments prove that you don't understand Alcoholism, as it can't be compared to firearms. Alcoholism is a disease that is hereditary through your parents, as it any addictive behavior. So tabacco, cocaine, alcohol or any other mind altering substance that takes you away from reality.
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Share with me why the Attorney General would spend time and money understanding the effects of Alcoholism on Society?
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Please study the disease of Alcoholism, before you speak as if your an expert on the subject. I have the disease of Alcholism, and have been in recovery for over two years. I understand the symptoms, I understand the role that Denzel plays in this movie. The ending where he admits that he is Alcholic, is the toughest thing any human will do. But it is required before they can address the disease and seek help to learn how to live with it.
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http://www.medicinenet.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=52888
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 @DinkorSink I never claimed that I am an expert of alcoholism although I do have some experience on the subject, and not one alcoholic that I personally know or even you have been forced to drink anything. I also said that I know the disease has a negative affect on everyone involved including society. My point is that EVERY person needs to take responsibility for themselves and quit blaming someone or something else. I also know that it doesn't have anything to do with tobacco or firearms, my point is that it's the same old story, as with those things, people putting the blame on everthing but themselves. I am sorry that you suffer from the disease and it sounds like you are trying very hard to overcome it. But I still don't understand why you are blaming Budweiser or any other company for you being an alcoholic. AGAIN, no one has forced you or anyone else to drink, smoke, do drugs or kill someone. I thought that when you acknowledge that you have that problem and seek help for it, part of the process is to quit blaming others and take the responsibility for your own actions. And good luck to you.
Isn't bad press better than no press at all?
Dear Budweiser,
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Hundreds of thousands of people have gotten DUI's while using your product. Many people have been killed by drunk drivers who were drunk off of Budweiser. This movie doesn't make you look bad, YOU ALREADY DO LOOK BAD.
 @Ethan Allen "The spoon made me fat."
 @mirrors_edge Right on. And having a gun around kills people. Always have to put the blame on someone or something besides ones self. NO ONE makes anyone drink alcohol, smoke, shoot a gun, eat too much, or run in front of a bus. Be responsible for yourselves!
 @Ethan Allen Get a grip, you have no idea what people that get DUI's or have killed somone because they are drunk have been drinking! Why would that make Bud look bad? It is a brand name, there are tons of other brand names that do the same thing. That is one of the dumbest things I have ever heard. In the movie no one forced the guy to drink PERIOD let alone tell him what BRAND he should drink!  It could have been Bud, Rainier, Coors or whatever.
Great example. But Tobacco companies put those warnings on their packaging not because they wanted to give people fair warning, but because the Federal government requires them to do so. They fought that tooth and nail, too, because informing consumers about the dangers of cigarettes is obviously bad for business. That's exactly why this portrayal makes Budweiser uncomfortable.
They are sensitive about it, yes and they will be, they are a business and it is not their business to show negative things about their product no matter what it is. Like any other business, they are out to make money. How much Budweiser would they have sold all these years if they told everyine that their product promotes alcholism! Tobacco companies put a warning label on the package so they can say they warned people, but you don't hear them advertising that fact outloud! Business is business and we all know when it comes to business, its a dog eat dog world out there. Businesses small or large aren't ever going to tell everyone the negatives of the products they put out! Even relationships are that way, you don't start a relationship by telling the other person all of your bad habits! They would run for their lives and never look back!!!
 @tshirt You're right. No one makes people drink, get drunk, and do stupid things that end up killing themselves and or others. Yet the companies who make Budweiser and Stoli are still very sensitive about their brands being used to portray how people abuse such products.Â
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It is interesting.
I always thought the company that makes a certain brand of product that is shown in a move must give their approval before they put the products in a movie.
Turns out I was wrong
For cry out loud - IT'S A MOVIE!! Get over it!!
Come on Anheuser-Busch.....................  Everyone who drinks your beer is not a perfect  and responsible drinker. Just because your product is in the movie doesn't make you "Bad", it just portrays the possible reality of  the life style of a everyday drinker.  If your so worried about "you and your product" looking bad then maybe you should stop producing your product!Â
What a joke...Budweiser has 'a long history of promoting responsible drinking and preventing drunk driving' yeah, since laws were passed that forced them to conclude commercials with safety statements and adorn cans with warnings. Before that, they cared about as much for your health as a plantation owner. That and I can almost guarantee this movie's drinking scenes can't be a worse representation of Budweiser than their atrocious commercials.Â
I thought Denzel played a highly functioning alcoholic in Man on Fire..?
 @SoTweetie But in this one, he's a pilot. :-)
So "Flight" implies that some alcoholics drink Anheuser-Busch and Stolichnaya products in real life?
I'm shocked, I tell you. Shocked!
@relatively Isn't that the truth! This is an interesting article. It caused me to consider that the movie industry could do more than AA and MADD put together to end drunk driving if they made a few movies in which a main character is seen consuming a specific brand of beer or spirits and then causing an absolutely horrific, graphically portrayed car crash. As the broken glass lies glittering on the pavement, a Budweiser can could roll significantly across the ominously silent scene --- the kind of thing you would remember every time you look at a Budweiser can forever afterward. (Someone I love very much has a drinking problem, so my view of this may be a little more emotional than the average.)
 @grmnshepherdess:Â
Your words portray very powerful imagery - especially the "ominous silence".Â
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 Having been involved in a very horrific car crash myself, I can tell you there is a moment, riht after impact, that is deadly silent & feels like the world has simply stopped - then everything kicks in to high gear - noise, people, rescue attempts, everything. It would be a truly terrifying moment for someone like me.Â
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Unfortunately, I think for most of the drinking public they would instead view it as just another violent movie, then drink their sodas & eat their popcorn there at the theatre, not associating anything in the scene with their own behavior & actions.
First, let me just say that if you haven't seen this movie.....go see it. I was looking forward to this film since the first time I saw the preview and it did not disappoint.
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With that being said, I had not given the typoe or brand of alcohol a second thought until I read this article. Anheuser-Busch and Stolichnaya are either trying to get additional name recognition time out of this, or they are going about hiding their product in a really stupid way.
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Once again, hats off to Zemeckis and Paramount. It is one of those films that will have you thinking about the dichotomy of right and wrong.Â
Embrace the FREE advertising!
"Dougherty and Mark Partridge, a Chicago intellectual property lawyer, also noted that a court rejected an effort to get by Caterpillar Inc. to get its logo removed from tractors driven by the villains in 2003's "George of the Jungle 2." The company had argued its trademark was harmed by having its product associated with the film's villains."
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I can understand why alcohol companies do not want to be associated with alcoholism or drinking and driving but seriously, Caterpillar Inc? You're afraid of being associated with a movie villain?!