A day-long comedy of errors began Monday morning when the Yes Men,
supported by Rainforest Action Network and Amazon Watch, pre-empted
Chevron's enormous new "We Agree" ad campaign with a satirical version of their own. The activists' version highlights Chevron's environmental and social
abuses - the same abuses they say Chevron is attempting to “greenwash.”
“Chevron's super-expensive fake street art is a cynical attempt
to gloss over the human rights abuses and environmental degradation
that is the legacy of Chevron's operations in Ecuador, Nigeria, Burma
and throughout the world,” said Ginger Cassady, a campaigner at
Rainforest Action Network. “They must think we're stupid.”
“They say we're 'interrupting the dialogue,'” said Andy Bichlbaum of the Yes Men, referring to Chevron's terse condemnation. “What dialogue? Chevron's ad campaign is an insulting, confusing monologue - with many tens of millions of dollars behind it.”
The activists' pre-emptive campaign began early Monday with a press release from a spoof Chevron domain which launched the fake “We Agree” campaign hours before the real Chevron could launch its ads. The fake "We Agree" site featured four “improved” advertisements, complete with downloadable PDF files to be used in on-the-street postering.
Nine hours later, after producing its own “We Agree” press release, the real Chevron decried the hoax in a predictably curt and humorless manner. Mere moments later, the counter-campaign issued a much better denial on Chevron's
laying out Chevron's principal arguments in its Ecuador case. “We have
binding agreements with the Ecuadorian Government exempting us from any
liabilities whatsoever, granted in exchange for a $40 million cleanup
of some wells by Texaco in the 1990s,” the spoof press release crowed,
absurdly yet accurately.
Throughout the day, a sort of slow vaudeville unfolded on the
web, as a number of outlets, from industry mouthpieces to the AFP and
even a watchdog group, produced accidental mash-ups of “real” and fake
information.
First, Fast Company fell for the hoax then related their duping
with humor. An outlet called “Environmental Leader,” quoted
indiscriminately from both real and fake press releases, before quietly
removing the fake parts a few hours later.
Shortly after that, Energy Digital, an online source providing “news
and information for Energy Executives” (capitalization theirs), quoted extensively
from the fake release to describe Chevron's campaign, then mentioned
that the campaign had “already been spoofed.” They didn't realize
they'd just fallen for that very same spoof.
Even the AFP found itself duped
and described with glee the hoax “that appeared to have fooled some
news outlets,” before going on to quote “the real firm” at length. (The
“real firm” wasn't.)
“If you really want to snooker the media, it's pretty hard for them to
resist,” said Mike Bonanno of the Yes Men. “We cobbled together some
fake releases with string and thumbtacks and chewing gum, and we fooled
the most respectable outlets.”
“Chevron is doing what we did, a million times over, with a
ginormous budget - and it never reveals its subterfuge,” said
Bichlbaum. “No wonder the media's full of lies.”
“Yesterday's spoof was a comedy of errors, but what's happening
in Ecuador is no joke,” said Mitch Anderson, a campaigner at Amazon
Watch. “While Chevron spends tens of millions every year to greenwash
their image and fool the media, Ecuadorians continue to die from their
toxic legacy."
Yesterday's hoax is just the beginning for the activists. “Stay
tuned,” said RAN's Cassady. “There's a lot more to come in the days
ahead. We're going to keep Chevron scrambling.
###
The Yes Men work to expose corporate crimes, mainly through humor.
|