
Karen Foshay, producer of Billboard Confidential, shares a few thoughts about her segment - and the state of LA's public advertising.
Having been born and raised in LA, I never gave much attention to billboards. They were always just there, like traffic and smog. A few years ago I was working with a photographer who had just moved to Los Angeles from Virginia. When I asked him how he liked LA, he said, “I just can’t get used to all of the billboards everywhere.” I chalked his comments up to that of a lifelong country boy who is now living in the big city. But then I thought about it some more So many of the great cities and towns in America aren’t blanketed in billboards - so what happened to LA? Why can’t someone stop it?
Back in April, the LA Weekly did a fantastic piece on the billboard industry in LA. Why weren’t people talking about it? What could I do to advance the story? When I got hired at Socal Connected, the first story I pitched was an investigation into the billboard industry. Frankly, there is a part of me that regrets pitching the story. I can no longer drive down the street without noticing billboards. They are everywhere - big ones, small ones, bright ones, ugly ones. I catch myself wondering what a cafĂ© might look like if it didn’t have three billboards on its roof. My boss thinks I need a 12 step program for billboard detox.
Los Angeles wouldn’t be the billboard capitol of the country if it weren’t for some key decisions by the City Council. In the fall of 2006, the City Council approved a massive settlement with three billboard companies: Clear Channel, CBS Outdoor and Regency. In a major exception to the 2002 billboard ban, the council allowed for these three companies to convert 877 billboards to LEDs, or digital billboards. With one stroke of the pen, the city council nearly doubled the amount of digital signs in the entire country! What really baffles me is that the city agreed to cut the permit fee from $314 bucks to $186 while the sign itself generates up to $150,000 a month! At a time when the city is operating in the red, kids don’t have books for schools and our roads are falling part, why is the city CUTTING fees paid by the billboard companies? I pay more to register my car than clear channel pays to permit a billboard!!!
RELATED RESOURCES:
Outdoor Advertising Association of America
The John W. Hartman Center for Sales, Advertising and Marketing History at Duke University
Coalition to Ban Billboard Blight
Scenic America
West LA Online
RELATED STORIES:
Billboard Confidential - By Correspondent Vince Gonzales - Los Angeles is the billboard capital of the nation and some are saying it is an environmental disaster - a disaster that doesn’t seem to be getting the attention of city leaders.
Commentary - By Sam Hall Kaplan - Sam Hall Kaplan, the former design critic for the L.A. Times and an Emmy-award winning former reporter for Fox News, praises billboards in Los Angeles, believing an array of brilliant, blinking conceits will mark LA as the creative capital of the world.
WEB ORIGINAL:
Ad-Buster - By Web Team - Billboard Liberators: Graffiti artists use illegal billboards in Los Angeles as giant canvases.
FROM THE BLOG:
Graffiti Is The Poor Man's Advertising Campaign - By Too Tall Jahmal - As long as our cities are filled with advertising they will be filled with graffiti.
I fought one of the big billboard companies. They put up a billboard on my property after three court battles, all of which they lost. (http://articles.latimes.com/2005/oct/23/local/me-billboard23)
They are corrupt and greedy.