Truck ad using Martin Luther King speech draws backlash

Truck ad using Martin Luther King speech draws backlash

by Joseph Anthony
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A TV commercial shown during the Super Bowl that used the voice of the late Martin Luther King Jr. to advertise pickup trucks drew criticism from viewers who found it insulting to the memory of the revered civil rights leader.

The ad for Dodge Ram trucks, seen by millions of football fans during the gameโ€™s second quarter, uses audio from the last major speech King gave before his assassination in 1968.

โ€œHe who is greatest among you shall be your servant,โ€ Kingโ€™s resonant voice is heard saying over images of firefighters, teachers and working men and women with their trucks helping people.

Reactions came before the game ended.

โ€œI want to punch that Dodge commercial in the face,โ€ wrote one Twitter user with the handle sreeker.

Lawyer Cat posted on Twitter: โ€œIโ€™m no civil rights scholar, but Iโ€™m pretty sure MLK never had a dream to be featured in a Dodge Ram commercial.โ€

Others placed messages of support on Dodge Ramโ€™s Facebook page. User Justin Newman posted: โ€œWell done, and a great commercial.โ€

Another Facebook user posted: โ€œLifelong RAM owner. Youโ€™ve made me proud.โ€

But the backlash remarks were in the majority. โ€œMartin Luther King DID NOT march in Selma so you could use his speech to sell trucks,โ€ Lori Borgen posted on the companyโ€™s Facebook page.

Representatives from Dodge Ram and parent Fiat Chrysler Automobiles were not immediately available for comment.

The King Center in Atlanta posted on Twitter early on Monday that it did not approve the advertisement.

โ€œNeither @TheKingCenter nor @BerniceKing is the entity that approves the use of #MLKโ€™s words or imagery for use in merchandise, entertainment (movies, music, artwork, etc) or advertisement, including tonightโ€™s @Dodge #SuperBowl commercial,โ€ the tweet read.

But Kingโ€™s estate, not the non-profit King Center, controls the civil rights leaderโ€™s speeches and recordings. Neither representatives for the estate nor Kingโ€™s surviving children were immediately available for comment.

Ram Trucks representatives told ABC News, Forbes and other media that the company had received all the necessary permissions.

โ€œEstate representatives were a very important part of the creative process,โ€ a Ram Trucks official told Slate.com.

The use of Kingโ€™s speeches, images and personal papers and items including his Bible and Nobel Peace prize are closely guarded by the estate and the subject of a long-running public feud among Kingโ€™s surviving children.

Last April, PepsiCo Inc pulled a commercial featuring model Kendall Jenner using a can of the soft drink to ease tensions between protesters and riot police after the ad prompted outrage and ridicule.

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