LOS ANGELES â" Warner Brothers marketers are hot in pursuit of ⦠truckers
It appears so. Despite a continued hard sell by Hollywood, audiences have been increasingly reluctant about paying a $2 to $5 surcharge to see movies in 3-D.
But Warner is not giving up. To advertise the 3-D effects of âJack the Giant Slayer,â set for release March 1, the studio has decided to buy space on Travel Plaza TV, which is distributed in about 300 gas stations and Pilot Flying J truck stops in 42 states.
It is less weird than it seems. The networkâs high-tech screens allow viewers to see 3-D imagery without wearing special glasses, according to Steven C. Barber, an advertising entrepreneur who sold Warner on the idea. Warner, Travel Plaza TV and Mr. Barberâs company, Vanilla Fire Productions, heralded their partership as âthe worldâs first 3-D without glasses ad campaignâ in a Feb. 6 news release.
Travel Plaza TV, which already carries ads for items like cookies and chili dogs, reaches 30 million people a month, Mr. Barber said. âThey have more families than truckers,â he added, putting the 18-wheel crowd at about 40 percent of viewers.
Warner has committed to use the network to advertise 3-D versions of both âJack the Giant Slayer,â a revved-up version of âJack and the Beanstalk,â and âPacific Rim,â a science-fiction film headed for theaters in July. Bill Botte, chief executive of Travel Plaza TV, said his company is âhoping to forge a long-term relationshipâ with Warner.
The studio had no comment.
Mr. Barber said he got the idea to bring movie ads to the 3-D network after popping into a Flying J in Utah last year. Since Warner made its commitment public, he said, three other major studios have called for demonstrations.
âI couldnât get anyone except Warner to call back a few months ago,â he said. âEven they started out lukewarm. But the demo made them sit up and say, âAha! This could be the future!â â