2ride4life
Member
I know that a lot of people have bemoaned the lack of Mazda5 advertising, me included, but this may prove to be interesting ...
(http://www.prdomain.com/companies/F/FordMotor/newsreleases/200792146404.htm)
The shows plot calls for five young couples and their families to live next door to each other on an idyllic street in suburban Boise, Idaho. The producers goal was to populate the neighborhood with a variety of brands including Honda and Toyota.
"I looked at their script and envisioned a Mazda5 in every driveway," said Witter. There isnt a better example of an upwardly mobile starter car for families. Its not only sporty looking it has three rows of seats which makes it great for kids."
The producers auditioned the car and agreed but with one caveat; they needed all five vehicles in different colors to be on location within a week.
After a flurry of calls, Witter found exactly what he needed. A fleet of Mazda5s had just arrived at the Port of Seattle. He arranged to have five shipped post-haste.
"So we got the whole show, not just one driveway. The only thing missing was the zoom-zoom-zoom jingle," said Witter. "Thats the kind of product integration other companies pay a lot of money for."
Well not really a "Desparate Housewives" watcher, but at least it something. Kind of hints at where Mazda wants to market this vehicle.
Cheers
(http://www.prdomain.com/companies/F/FordMotor/newsreleases/200792146404.htm)
The shows plot calls for five young couples and their families to live next door to each other on an idyllic street in suburban Boise, Idaho. The producers goal was to populate the neighborhood with a variety of brands including Honda and Toyota.
"I looked at their script and envisioned a Mazda5 in every driveway," said Witter. There isnt a better example of an upwardly mobile starter car for families. Its not only sporty looking it has three rows of seats which makes it great for kids."
The producers auditioned the car and agreed but with one caveat; they needed all five vehicles in different colors to be on location within a week.
After a flurry of calls, Witter found exactly what he needed. A fleet of Mazda5s had just arrived at the Port of Seattle. He arranged to have five shipped post-haste.
"So we got the whole show, not just one driveway. The only thing missing was the zoom-zoom-zoom jingle," said Witter. "Thats the kind of product integration other companies pay a lot of money for."
Well not really a "Desparate Housewives" watcher, but at least it something. Kind of hints at where Mazda wants to market this vehicle.
Cheers