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The Backlash Continues: Tech Company Pulls Ads From Olympics As Boycott Movement Grows

AP Photo/Thibault Camus

Negative reactions to Friday night’s Olympic opening ceremony continue to pour in, and at least one company has announced it is pulling its advertising, while a boycott movement has been trending on Twitter.

I personally found the show to be boring most of the time, offensive the rest, and I wondered why organizers hadn’t taken into consideration that they couldn’t control the weather. (To be fair, however, the laser show at the end and Celine Deon’s performance were quality highlights.)


What even was this?

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One company isn’t taking it lying down, saying they were “shocked by the mockery”:

C Spire is not a behemoth, but the Mississippi-based telecommunications and technology company does have a reported market cap of over $348 million, so they’re not nobodies either. 

Mississippi Governor Tate Reeves backed the company’s move:

It will be interesting to see if other companies follow suit. Meanwhile, a boycott movement has gained traction on Twitter/X:

I will spare you any photos of “Naked Blue Man.”

Although French President Emmanuel Macron praised the ceremony, Marion Maréchal, a member of the European Parliament, tried to distance La République from the show: 

The #BoycottOlympics tag is seeing a lot of action on X, with many of the reactions too heated to post here. Here’s a sample of the tamer feelings displayed:

I wrote earlier Saturday about how I was watching the Super Bowl with my seven-year-old in 2004 when Janet Jackson and Justin Timberlake decided it was a great time to get raunchy. Athletic events simply aren’t the place for that time of thing:

It remains to be seen how much the backlash affects the games and whether more advertisers pull their money from NBC. My first instinct is to say no—people will forget and start focusing on the actual competitions, and the kinds of people who thought up this garbage in the first place will keep attempting to shove it down our throats.

However, I’ve been wrong before—and I’m glad of it—because I thought the Bud Light/Dylan Mulvaney fiasco would quickly fade from the headlines, yet the company lost billions as its betrayed customers let their voices be heard. 

Could we be in for a repeat?

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