Posted on 1-2-2002
Chumbawamba
Choosy About
Who To Hurt
by David Rowan The Observer , Sunday January 27, 2002
It is the world's biggest car-maker, boasting a turnover of
£120 billion
last year. Sales of Vauxhall and Pontiac cars have propelled
General Motors
to the top of the auto industry. So when executives heard a
song called
'Pass it Along', they immediately wanted to use it as the sort
of 'youthful
and hip' tune that perfectly suited the image their new adverts
sought to
reinforce.
But what they didn't know was that the British band in question
-
Chumbawamba - - - were lifelong anarchists opposed to big corporations
like
GM. The band was embroiled in controversy in 1998 when member
Danbert
Nobacon poured a bucket of water over Deputy Prime Minister
John Prescott
at the Brit Awards.
GM thought nothing more after handing over a cheque for £70,000
to the band
for the use of the song. But behind the scenes, Chumbawamba
were
negotiating with anti-corporate activists to see if they would
take the fee
and put it to use. The band contacted CorpWatch, a US campaign
group aimed
at 'holding corporations accountable', to see if it would 'put
the money to
good anti-capitalist use if we accepted the ad'. CorpWatch had
no trouble
in agreeing. Chumbawamba vocalist Alice Nutter then sent an
email 'in
solidarity' to IndyMedia, a radical global network, to enquire
if it would
accept half of the money. 'We're offering this money to you
because the
work you do and information you supply is invaluable,' she wrote.
After much anguished internal debate, IndyMedia also agreed
to accept. As a
result, the two leading campaign groups are now spending GM's
money to
mount an aggressive information and environmental campaign -
against GM.
'We're planning on using some of the money to document some
of the social
and environmental impacts of General Motors itself,' Joshua
Karliner,
executive director of CorpWatch, told The Observer . 'It's known
for
resisting the kinds of change in production that would assist
in reducing
climate change, and for helping debunk the science of global
warming. If
the company knew how its fee was being used, I'd imagine it
would make
executives squirm in their big comfortable leather chairs.'
The company last night said it was unaware of the work it was
financing.
Dayna Hart, publicist for Pontiac at GM, said: 'I didn't know
that. I did
know [the band] had quite a political background in England.
That's very
interesting.' Perhaps GM should have seen the problem coming.
Chumbawamba
have a history of using advertising revenue to fund activist
causes. They
accepted a Renault commercial in Italy only after Italian pirate
radio
stations said they would use the money. The band also gave Ford's
money for
a South African ad to local anti-capitalists. As guitarist Boff
explained
on the band's website: 'We pass the moral buck, let someone
else justify
the decision, and in turn know that some people will vilify
us for it. We'd
discovered through all the years of having no money just how
powerful it
can be if it's in the right hands.'
Some corporations, however, are apparently too risky for the
band. 'When
Nike offered us just short of a million dollars to use "Tubthumping"
as the
music for their World Cup ad in '98, we had to say no,' Nutter
said. The
band also turned down £500,000 from General Electric to use
'Tubthumping',
its biggest hit, to advertise an X-ray machine, after discovering
that GE
also makes engines for military aircraft. IndyMedia said it
would use some
of the money for 'corporate-jamming actions', publicising the
flaws of
firms such as GM. At CorpWatch, the money is powering an internet
campaign
against GM and corporate globalisation.
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