Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

CW turns negative critiques into advantage

A print advertisement for the CW’s “Gossip Girl,” is shown.  (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
By Steve Johnson Chicago Tribune

Give them credit for trying – and, when it comes to getting attention and ticking people off, succeeding.

In a slyly terrific series of new ads for its underwatched but overdiscussed teen series “Gossip Girl,” the CW television network turns outraged critiques of the show into selling points.

“A Nasty Piece of Work,” says the New York Post, in very big letters, atop an image of two of the show’s lithe young things smooching topless in a pool.

“Every Parent’s Nightmare,” opines the Boston Herald, again atop the sort of young-person necking session frequently found on the show, which looks at privileged Manhattan teens behaving as if trying to channel old “Dynasty” episodes.

The logic of these ads, running in print and online before the show’s second season, which starts Sept. 1, is impeccable. The fusty old watchdog media, in shocked review text, tries to guard our youth from discovering that some fictional teens behave with less than full decorum.

And CW, the struggling network formed from the wreckage of UPN and the WB, figures that there’s no better way to reach its teen and young-adult target audience than by telling them their parents would hate this.

It’s all in the hopes of boosting viewership from the scant 2.6 million viewers per episode the show drew in the first season, despite a lot of attention from the tabloid press and the gossip blogs.

Grasping for attention by any means possible is hardly new to television. When “NYPD Blue” debuted with racy language and some dorsal nudity in 1993, it handled the ensuing controversy almost as if it had been planned.

Controversial ads aren’t even new to “Gossip Girl.” Earlier this year, the ad campaign featured the text-messaging legend, “OMFG.” CW insisted, with a wink, that the letters stood for, “Oh My Freaking Goodness.”

What feels fresh about this new sally is that it turns critical opinion on its ear. Instead of taking a few phrases out of context to make a lukewarm (or negative) review sound like a rave, CW is embracing the dislike – and the more purple the prose, the better.

One of the ads even quotes the most easily outraged people in America, the conservative Parents Television Council, who called the show “mind-blowingly inappropriate.”