NEW
YORK (AP) — Under pressure from a conservative advocacy group, The
Hallmark Channel has pulled ads for a wedding-planning website that
featured two brides kissing at the altar.
The family-friendly network, which is in the midst of its heavily watched holiday programming, removed the ads because the controversy was a distraction, a spokesperson said in an interview Saturday.
“The
debate surrounding these commercials on all sides was distracting from
the purpose of our network, which is to provide entertainment value,”
said a statement provided by Molly Biwer, senior vice president for
public affairs and communications at Hallmark.
In
an interview, she added: “The Hallmark brand is never going to be
divisive. We don’t want to generate controversy, we’ve tried very hard
to stay out of it ... we just felt it was in the best interest of the
brand to pull them and not continue to generate controversy.”
There
was immediate criticism on Twitter. Ellen DeGeneres asked Hallmark:
“Isn’t it almost 2020? What are you thinking? Please explain. We’re all
ears.”
Biwer
confirmed that a conservative group, One Million Moms, part of the
American Family Association, had complained about the ads to Bill
Abbott, CEO of Crown Media Family Networks, Hallmark’s parent company.
A
post on the group’s website said that Abbott “reported the
advertisement aired in error.” The group also wrote: “The call to our
office gave us the opportunity to confirm the Hallmark Channel will
continue to be a safe and family-friendly network.”
Zola
had submitted six ads, and four had a lesbian couple. After Hallmark
pulled those ads, but not two featuring only opposite-sex couples, Zola
pulled its remaining ads, the company said.
“The
only difference between the commercials that were flagged and the ones
that were approved was that the commercials that did not meet Hallmark’s
standards included a lesbian couple kissing,” said Mike Chi, Zola’s
chief marketing officer, in a statement sent to the AP. ”Hallmark
approved a commercial where a heterosexual couple kissed.
“All kisses, couples and marriages are equal celebrations of love and we will no longer be advertising on Hallmark,” Chi said.
In one of the pulled ads,
two brides stand at the altar and wonder aloud whether their wedding
would be going more smoothly if they had used a wedding planning site
like Zola. The lighthearted ad ends with the two brides sharing a quick
kiss on the altar.
Actress
Sandra Bernhard, who played one of the first openly bisexual characters
on network TV in “Roseanne,” also criticized Hallmark’s decision.
“All
the groovy gay ladies i know won’t be watching your Christmas schlock,”
she wrote on Twitter, addressing Hallmark. “They’ll be out celebrating
with their ’families’ wives, children, friends on & on & getting
married in chic ensembles. Didn’t you all get the memo? Family is all
inclusive.”
The developments came as Hallmark appeared to be considering more same-sex themed content.
Asked
about the possibility of holiday movies based on same-sex
relationships, Abbott was quoted in The Hollywood Reporter in
mid-November as saying on its TV podcast: “We’re open to really any type
of movie of any type of relationship.”
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