Tuesday 7 August 2012

Mmm... Olympics!


I noticed a truly amazing thing while watching the Olympics on TV the other night.

It wasn’t the atmosphere in the stadium. It wasn’t the outstanding performances of Jessica, or Mo, or The Ginger Fella. It wasn’t even Gaby Logan’s Shoddy Cardboard Big Ben Gold Medal totalizer®.
Gaby Logan’s Shoddy Cardboard Big Ben Gold Medal totalizer®


No, it was something much more inconsequential; something you may not even have noticed at all. It was the colour purple.

The Cadburys Dairy Milk London 2012 Medal Givers.
Purple is everywhere: hanging from the rafters, adorning the many thousands of volunteers who keep everything moving, around the necks of medalists; it’s even the colour of the podium every athlete aims to end up standing on.

What’s wrong with purple I hear you ask? Nothing. I like purple. Purple is a perfectly nice colour. The trouble is that purple just so happens to be the main colour of one of the Games’ main sponsors.

A simple tweet about the podium making a Twitterer hanker after a bar of Dairy Milk was where it started. Quite a funny gag I thought, but the more I considered it, the more I wondered if there was indeed an ulterior motif behind the games’ branding beside it looking quite nice and feeling a bit regal.

The funny Tweet.
Ok, let’s ignore the fact that I find it immoral that a maker of fatty chocolate treats should be allowed anywhere near a festival celebrating the quest for physical perfection. That’s beside the point.

What I find hard to believe is that LOCOG would accidently allow the branding of a sponsor to match the branding of the Games. In my experience, it’s difficult enough to get a 50-word piece of copy through LOCOG - it’s like walking a minefield with elephantiasis of the ankles. So the decision to use the colour purple, or the decision to accept the purple brand as a sponsor (whichever came first), is frankly baffling.

Surely there were meetings in which sketches were shared? Then artist’s impressions, then material samples, print previews, dressing sessions, fittings and so on and so forth? Surely during one of these meetings, perhaps in which a bar, or bars, of chocolate might even have featured on the table, someone should have noticed the similarity of the purple in the stadium and the purple wrapping the chocolate?

Or is this all just a ridiculously implausible accident?

Forget Bradley Wiggins – the true winner of these games is Cadbury’s.

In my mind, the only way the Games could push its products any further would be if Curly Wurlys replaced the relay race batons.

Mmm… relay race batons.