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The Jacksonville Transportation Authority turned down a proposal by Sirius Satellite Radio to wrap Skyway trains iwith advertising when Jacksonville hosts the Super Bowl next year.
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Last modified Fri., November 19, 2004 - 03:23 AM
Originally created Friday, November 19, 2004
JTA rejects Skyway ads at Bowl time
Campaign would have brought in $140,000 but was called inappropriate.
By DAVID BAUERLEIN
The Times-Union
A satellite radio business hoped to turn the white Skyway trains into blue moving billboards as they glide through downtown Jacksonville on elevated tracks during the Super Bowl.
It would have been a financial money-maker for the Jacksonville Transportation Authority, raking in $140,000 after expenses.
But tempting as the money was, JTA board members blanched Thursday at the thought of Skyway riders climbing into a train with marketing slogans like "100 percent commercial free music" and "Ride with the Big Dog" splashed across the train's outside walls.
"I don't want us to get the image that all we're doing is advertising and trying to make money," JTA board member Charles Sawyer said. "I think it's a bad, bad image for Jacksonville."
He later added bluntly, "I can't think of anything more tacky."
The JTA is inviting offers from companies to advertise during the Super Bowl on JTA facilities, including the Kings Avenue parking garage, Skyway stations, park-and-ride lots and buses. The JTA is trying to raise money to recoup the cost of providing extra bus service during the Super Bowl when organizers expect 100,000 visitors.
The agency has marketed advertising space for years on buses. In some cases, advertisers pay to cover the entire bus in a "wrap," like a brightly colored Christmas present.
Sirius Satellite Radio was interested in purchasing the right to wrap the Skyway trains. The company also wanted to puts its advertising on the Kings Avenue parking garage, located in view of Interstate 95 in San Marco, and at the Skyway stations. The advertising would have been for a six-week period, beginning before the Toyota Gator Bowl in January and ending after the Super Bowl in February.
JTA Executive Director Michael Blaylock said the staff "wrestled back and forth" with whether it's appropriate to put advertising on the Skyway trains.
"First, we were afraid we were going to get an Oscar Mayer wiener sponsorship and that wouldn't be good," Blaylock said.
The Sirius marketing campaign wouldn't have turned the Skyway trains into hot dogs, but board members said it still crossed the line of what would be tasteful.
david.bauerleinjacksonville.com, (904) 359-4581

The Jacksonville Transportation Authority turned down a proposal by Sirius Satellite Radio to wrap Skyway trains iwith advertising when Jacksonville hosts the Super Bowl next year.
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