NFL Bans GNC Commercial Due to Content

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Why the NFL Rejected GNC’s Super Bowl Commercial

Tom Huddleston, Jr.

GNC appears to have spent millions of dollars on a Super Bowl commercial that won't air during the Super Bowl.

The vitamin and supplement retailer said on Tuesday that the 30-second ad it prepared for the Super Bowl won't air during Sunday's big game because it was rejected by the National Football League. A spokesman at the NFL told ESPN that the league's decision reflects NFL policies that ban advertising of supplements. The league does not allow players to endorse GNC, which currently sells multiple products that the NFL has banned players from using.

GNC marketing chief Jeff Hennion told USA Today that the company does sell two supplements banned by the NFL—synephrine, a stimulant; and a steroid hormone called DHEA. GNC had no discussions with the NFL prior to the league's decision to reject the commercial. Hennion added that GNC likely would have considered removing those products from its shelves had the company known that the NFL would reject its ad. (GNC's Super Bowl ad does not specifically mention any of its vitamins or supplements, much less those banned by the NFL, in the commercial in question.)

GNC had been set to make its first ever appearance during a Super Bowl commercial break with an ad from the company's new "One New GNC" marketing campaign. The cost of advertising during the big game—typically the year's most-watched television event in the U.S.—costs an average of $5 million for a 30-second slot. Host network Fox had sold roughly 90% of its ad spots for the big game by December 2016.

In addition to the massive cost just to secure a Super Bowl commercial slot, most advertisers also spend even more money to produce and promote the typically glitzy ads.

You can watch the banned GNC ad, which debuted online earlier today, here:



For GNC, the major ad purchase had been part of the company's effort to reinvent itself as a more customer-first retailer after revamping prices last month. GNC has struggled to compete with the likes of http://fortune.com/fortune500/walmart-1/ and various online retailers in recent years, with the company's shares losing 60% of their value in 2016. In 2017, GNC's stock has dipped nearly 20% since the start of the year, thought the company's shares were up slightly on Tuesday afternoon following news of the rejected ad.
 
GNC has rather overpriced and questionable products that noobs tend to buy anyway.

Smart move by the NFL.
 
Fuck GNC!!
Maybe they should stop price gauging and ripping people off. They chaege almost DOUBLE on all the same products available all over the web.
$45 dollars for 2lbs of protein. GTFO!!
 
If GNC want's to reinvent itself.
They need to Empty Half the Store of all that Crap they Promote as a quality supplement.

And then they need to come Way Down on the Prices, and stop having their Sales People trying to Push you to buy this and that.

If Vitamin Shoppe can make money selling supplements (and I by No Means am holding them up as a Great Company, they are OK for some things).

But I've always seen GNC as a place that try's to Gouge you....................... JP
 
I'm kind of surprised that the discussion turned towards how no one likes GNC, lol.

The point of the story that caught my attention is that they spent millions on an ad and then they got it pulled because of a "steroid like" supplement they sell... That wasn't even depicted in the commercial!
 
I'm kind of surprised that the discussion turned towards how no one likes GNC, lol.

The point of the story that caught my attention is that they spent millions on an ad and then they got it pulled because of a "steroid like" supplement they sell... That wasn't even depicted in the commercial!
I must be the odd man out. I've been using their mega man vitamins for awhile now. I catch them on bogo sales etc and they're priced better than competitors, and what I've ordered always gets to me in a few days.

Does seem odd that they'd ban it based on 2 products they sell they don't like not even depicted there.

It's hard for me to believe that no other company that advertises during the super bowl doesn't have a skeleton here or there in their closet as well.
 
I must be the odd man out. I've been using their mega man vitamins for awhile now. I catch them on bogo sales etc and they're priced better than competitors, and what I've ordered always gets to me in a few days.

Does seem odd that they'd ban it based on 2 products they sell they don't like not even depicted there.

It's hard for me to believe that no other company that advertises during the super bowl doesn't have a skeleton here or there in their closet as well.
They ban gnc ad because of 2 banned products yet they advertise alcohol and their players are getting dui's and alcohol related offenses all the time....
 
I'm kind of surprised that the discussion turned towards how no one likes GNC, lol.

The point of the story that caught my attention is that they spent millions on an ad and then they got it pulled because of a "steroid like" supplement they sell... That wasn't even depicted in the commercial!

with all the new information about football players and head trauma, I wonder which is more dangerous :rolleyes:.
 
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