The Atlantic on Tuesday issued a simple three-word apology for publishing an advertisement by the Church of Scientology that resembled a normal article from the acclaimed magazine: âWe screwed up.â
The Web page, published around lunchtime on Monday, was labeled as âsponsor content,â but otherwise looked like a sunny blog post about the churchâs expansion. The page was titled âDavid Miscavige Leads Scientology to Milestone Year.â It was noticed by reporters at other news organizations on Monday evening and was stripped from The Atlanticâs site by midnight.
âIt shouldnât have taken a wave of constructive criticism â" but it has â" to alert us that weâve made a mistake, possibly several mistakes,â The Atlantic said in a statement. âWe now realize that as we explored new forms of digital advertising, we failed to update the policies that must govern the decisions we make along the way.â
In other words: The Web site published Scientologyâs ad without considerin all the consequences.
The Atlantic is far from the only digital publisher pitching advertisers on what is known as sponsored content. Gawker and BuzzFeed are among the other Web sites that have gained attention for the practice, which places an advertiserâs words and visuals (the content) within the frame of the site. The Huffington Post has a whole section front for sponsored content.
But no instance of sponsored content has come under as much criticism as this one. Gawker called the sponsored Web page âbizarre, blatant propaganda for Scientology.â Others raised questions about why all the comments on the page were supportive of the church, indicating that critical comments were being deleted. A spokeswoman for The Atlantic said that the comments were moderated by its marketing team, not by the editorial team that moderates comments on normal articles.
At the same time, ot! hers defended the arrangement as a smart business move. The churchâs ad buy comes at a time when it is trying to blunt the impact of a new book about the secretive religion by Lawrence Wright, âGoing Clear: Scientology, Hollywood and the Prison of Belief.â The book will be published on Thursday.
On the same day, the NBC newsmagazine âRock Center with Brian Williamsâ will broadcast an interview with the writer and director Paul Haggis, described by the network as âthe most famous Scientologist to leave Scientology and speak out against it.â
The Atlantic said on Tuesday that it deleted the Scientology ad âuntil we figure all of this out,â meaning the policies that govern sponsored content.
âItâs safe to say that we are thinking a lot more about these policies after running this ad than we did beorehand,â the magazine said.
The magazine indicated that it was not backing away from sponsored content altogether, far from it: âWe remain committed to and enthusiastic about innovation in digital advertising, but acknowledge â" sheepishly â" that we got ahead of ourselves.â The statement concluded, âWe are sorry, and weâre working very hard to put things right.â
The Atlantic spokeswoman said that the handling of comments on sponsored content is one of the issues it is going to review.
A version of this article appeared in print on 01/16/2013, on page B3 of the NewYork edition with the headline: The Atlantic Apologizes for Scientology Ad, and Says It Will Rethink Its Policies.