Press Releases
dna13 in the News
Resource Library
Industry News
Professional Services and Support

Get in the driver's seat. Request a web demo
Industry News    Reputation Management    CBC Bumbles Messaging about Hockey Night Theme...

CBC Bumbles Messaging about Hockey Night Theme Song


Print - FPinfomart - Newstex Blogs - Thursday June 12th, 2008


You have to wonder how the talk went at CBC the day they decided to play hardball with the author of the iconic Hockey Night in Canada theme song.

"That theme is too recognizable," ne exec said to the other. "Is that really worth a couple of million dollars?"

(Pardon me while I get out my calculator and figure out how much cash the theme song would generate in mobile phone ring tones at $3 per customer.)

Tired of the legal strictures of their expiring agreement with the jingle's songwriter, CBC decided to play hardball, setting a deadline for negotiations with the songwriter's agent. They had been unable to reach agreement on an outright purchase of the song (rumored asking price: $2.5 million), or on the extension of an agreement that cost $500 for each use, but limited the CBC to only using it with hockey games.

(For those of you outside Canada who don't get why this is important, Hockey Night in Canada is one of the strongest TV franchises in the country, the highest-yielding cash cow in the national broadcaster's barn, and the theme song is fondly thought of as an unofficial national anthem for us canoeheads.)

The dumbest attempt at message hardball came when executive director of sports Scott Moore told the Globe and Mail the agent didn't understand that the song just wasn't worth much to anyone other than the CBC.

If this was an attempt to get negotiations back on track, it worked just about as well as CBC's failed bid to televise the Vancouver Olympics. Rival CTV, which outbid CBC for Olympic broadcasts starting in 2010, also snatched the theme song away from the public broadcaster for "an undisclosed sum."

As a bargaining ploy, the "worthless" line may have seemed like a good idea.

But as CTV starts planning how to best use a song that not only means HOCKEY to every Canadian, but means CANADA to most Canadians (even more than our actual anthem) CBC must be thinking the word "priceless" might have been a better choice. Technorati Tags: branding,brand,cbc,canadian broadcasting corporation,hockey night in canada,hockey,sports,music,jingles,songs, songwriting,copyrights,negotiations,mistakes

Share This

This industry article was extracted using dna13's media and market monitoring software. dna13 offers on-demand, communications and stakeholder management software designed to help PR professionals manage, monitor and measure their outreach, relationships and corporate reputation. The web-based solution helps you organize your communications workflow around the campaigns and issues you.re tracking, for synchronized management 24/7 and around the globe. The automated media monitoring function lets you define unlimited search terms as it scans the largest collection of TV, print, Internet and blog media content available electronically, bringing full text and video direct to your desktop. No more ordering broadcast clips. Instead, click a button and watch a clip stream on your computer. Real time alerts on breaking news, and comparative keyword analysis of markets, mediums and outlets . even competitor coverage, puts you in a position for agile reaction. Create campaign outreach and media analysis reports with our integrated Clip Book publishing wizard and share electronically with your stakeholders and team members in multiple formats.

Download whitepapers, factsheets and case studies