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BP releases apology ad: phony or heartfelt?

By | June 4, 2010, 5:00 AM PDT

BP released an ad yesterday, showing its CEO, Tony Hayward, issuing an apology. Speaking directly into the camera, Hayward thanks the government, pledges to do everything in the company’s power to clean up the spill, and apologizes to all affected.

But BP has been under attack from all sides, and Hayward has been responsible for several PR gaffes. At one point, he downplayed the impact of the spill because the gulf “is a very big ocean.” Later, in response to media attacks, seemingly forgetting that eleven crew members died on the rig, he said, “You know, I’d like my life back.”

BP has also been under attack from new media in ways the company could never have expected. There have been minor outcries that the company is restricting journalists and photographers from investigating the spill. Perhaps that’s why truly damning photos of the spill’s effects, close up, have been slow in coming.

But today, AP photographer Charlie Riedel published the most horrifying images yet, close-up shots of seabirds coated in oil. The photos are front-page news–BP’s apology ad is not.

The grassroots campaign has been just as damaging. Yesterday, a man claiming to be behind the @BPGlobalPR series of cutting, satirical tweets posted an article outlining his outrage.

So what do you all think? Will this ad have any effect?

Photo: Charlie Riedel/AP

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Dan Nosowitz

About Dan Nosowitz

Dan Nosowtiz was a contributing editor for SmartPlanet in 2010.

Dan Nosowitz

Dan Nosowitz

Contributing Editor, Technology

Dan Nosowitz has written for Popular Science, Fast Company and Gizmodo. He holds a degree from McGill University in Canada. He is based in New York.

Follow him on Twitter.

Dan Nosowitz

Dan Nosowitz

Dan Nosowitz does not hold any investments in the technology companies he covers.

He writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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0 Votes
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Corporations cannot apologize - they have no empathy
BP is a corporation; corporations have no emotions and thus any
apology is meaningless. Corporations only care about money. If
the oil spill hurts BP's money, then they are going to do whatever it
takes to get money flowing again.
Posted by MarkAurelius
4th Jun 2010
0 Votes
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Corporations have no empathy...but corporations are...
...bodies of people, many of whom do have human emotion and
empathy. While I can't speak for any one of them, I can imagine
the difficulty in realizing how badly the company you've steered
for several years has f'd up so badly as to imagine the possibility
of ceasing to exist because of this disaster. Investigations should
be held, after this is all done and emotions are not running at a
fever pitch, and if wrongdoing is uncovered (as it most assuredly
will be) then those like Hayward should be held accountable. In
reality, his life is over. He's done.

Sadly, as in past episodes of corporate idiocy, many who had no
input into the decision-making will have their lives adversely
affected by it. Think about that the next time you feel the urge to
lash out at a BP convenience store clerk. It is not his/her fault.
They are just doing their job, and that job may be threatened by
all this.

Finally, let's wait and see the ultimate impact to the environment
before tearing off our clothes in sadness. Scientists are human,
too, and many have admitted this "shortcoming" lately as the oil
slick has not acted exactly as they had thought. Perhaps mother
earth will deal with this better than we think. Ignore the pols who
will try to take some advantage of this situation. Or don't ignore
them...pay close attention to them and their actions and run the
opposite direction.

God help us all.
Posted by aimcbt@...
4th Jun 2010
0 Votes
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RE: BP releases apology ad: phony or heartfelt?
I'm sure it is heartfelt, and carefully calculated.

What the ad (rightfully) doesn't point out, is how the gov't has dragged its feet and passively blocked efforts to stop this spill until they got the photo-ops of oil-soaked wildlife and beaches, to use in its anti-human "green" campaign (I'm sure the two Earth Worshipers appointed to the panel will find a 'global warming' contribution by the spill).

The other thing the ad doesn't do, is to lay blame where it belongs for the extent of this accident: with the environmentalists (Earth Worshipers). By preventing BP from drilling in shallower water, or on dry land, the environmentalists have pushed them into taking this unnecessary risk by drilling through a mile of water, where the effects of temperature and pressure multiply the difficulty in drilling, anticipating problems, and dealing with the problems that will undoubtedly crop up.

As usual, the Man-hating Earth Worshipers, acting with the best of intentions (and typical short-sightedness), sow disaster.

Where's their apology?
Posted by hiraghm@...
4th Jun 2010
0 Votes
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"We will make this right" huh?
No, Tony, you won't. You can't. You can't make it right, because you can't restore life to those which have suffered and died.

But let's start with something simple. Stop lying.
Posted by SpectreWriter
4th Jun 2010
0 Votes
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@HIRAGM
Interesting take on environmentalists to blame them for this disaster. The current crisis seems to prove the point that there needs to be better regulation of the oil industry. This accident has made a lot of folks more enviromentally aware because fishing, shrimping and tourism are take major hits.

As far as the corporate apology, it is helpful but also can be seen as a cynical ploy. As pointed out in an earlier post, corporations do not feel but the people in the corporations do feel. In the documentary "The Corporation" an executive of Shell Oil was confronted by activists on his lawn; he met with them and even agreed to take action to make Shell Oil a better "neighbor". The executive did not have to take any time to meet with the activists, he could have called police or just ignor them.

Oil companies are an important part of the economy, but not at the expense of other parts like fishing and tourism. An apology followed with a change of action by BP will show the sincerity of the apology.
Posted by sboverie
4th Jun 2010
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RE: BP releases apology ad: phony or heartfelt?
It struck me as heartfelt. No doubt they are a corporation with their mind on profit. But, isn't that what a company exists for...to make a profit? It amazes me how judgmental people can be about a corporation's desire to make money and then head off to a job where they do exactly the same thing. Plus, aren't we all just a little tired of a media and culture that pounces on every little word or phrase that comes out of someone's mouth? Just because he said he wants his life back (a reasonable expression of frustration given the enormous attention and pressure) doesn't mean he was disrespecting those who died during the explosion. I want to see the spill end like most everyone else does. But, we would all do well to recognize that mistakes happen AND that not every emergency has an easy fix. Given the loss of reputation and money, I doubt there is anyone who wishes more that this had never happened and that it would end quickly.
Posted by pastorsam
4th Jun 2010
0 Votes
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RE: BP releases apology ad: phony or heartfelt?
definitely phony! I live on the Alabama Gulf Coast, and we are basically screwed. Word down here is that BP is getting PR advice from a Chicago firm. hmmmm....
Posted by toni7467
5th Jun 2010
0 Votes
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hiraghm@
The problem with your assertion is that there is nothing to back it up. Dry land and shallow water drilling is still going on. BP was not drilling where they were because they couldn't drill elsewhere but because there was apparently a rather large oil field there. By all accounts I've seen they were in the process of capping the well to set it aside for later extraction when the disaster struck.

As others have noted corporations are amoral. Their primary goal is profit. The apology is an exercise in PR.
Posted by riverat1
8th Jun 2010
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