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24 April 2010

hand me that Anusara and a chicken wing


When a product with a well-known brand name is seen in a movie or television show, that's called "product placement": "product placement, or embedded marketing, is a form of advertisement, where branded goods or services are placed in a context usually devoid of ads, such as movies, the story line of television shows, or news programs. The product placement is often not disclosed at the time that the good or service is featured." An example of product placement would be when the characters are drinking Budweiser beer and eating Kentucky Fried Chicken and the labels are featured prominately so you don't miss them. Companies typically pay for product placement.

What a surprise then when one of the characters who was under suspicion for murdering his girlfriend in this week's episode of Law and Order: Special Victims' Unit ("Beef") say he was an Anusara yoga teacher. Not just any old yoga teacher, but an ANUSARA yoga teacher. The writers made sure to have the character tell detectives Elliot and Oliva that his yoga teaching was all about "grace" (John Friend's tagline for his trademarked style of yoga) so how could he possibly be a murderer? Wow. It's usually cigarettes and booze that are product placements, but now yoga? Ah....yoga in America.

Sounds like someone on the Law and Order: SVU staff digs Anusara because why was character an ANUSARA yoga teacher, not just a plain vanilla yoga teacher? Being an ANUSARA yoga teacher added nothing to the plot, a non-branded yoga teacher character would have worked just the same. Of course, only someone who knows about Anusara yoga and who was listening carefully would have caught the reference. It would have gone over the head of someone who knows nothing about trademarked yoga, but it made me go "hmmmmmm......." Just sayin'.

So it was a breath of fresh air to read the New York Times story A Yoga Manifesto about yoga's "new wave" of "a brewing resistance to...the cult of personality,", i.e., the rock star yogis. Years ago I did a weekend workshop with John Friend before he was filling up the huge halls and he had an entourage of yoga groupies students that would rival any rock star.

From the NYT article:

"And is it surprising that yoga, like so much else in this age of celebrity, now has something of a star system, with yoga teachers now almost as recognizable as Oscar winners? The flowing locks of Rodney Yee. The do-rag bandanna worn by Baron Baptiste. The hyper perpetual calm exhibited by David Life and Sharon Gannon, who taught Sting, Madonna and Russell Simmons. The contortions (and Rolls-Royces) of Bikram Choudhury.

...'The irony is that yoga, and spiritual ideals for which it stands, have become the ultimate commodity,' Mark Singleton, the author of Yoga Body: The Origins of Modern Posture Practice, wrote in an e-mail message this week. 'Spirituality is a style, and the ‘rock star’ yoga teachers are the style gurus.'"


The article speaks about the success of Yoga to the People, the New York yoga business that is at the forefront of the "no rock star yogis" yoga. While Yoga to the People has a contribution-only, pay-what-you-can fee structure, apparently it's a cash cow for Greg Gumucio. He has three studios in New York (including two hot-yoga studios that charge $8 a class), one in San Francisco, one in Berkeley, and one scheduled to open in Brooklyn. He is considering expanding to Austin, Chicago, and Los Angeles. I say good for him because it's a great idea.

The irony of success is that Greg Gumacio and his brand of "yoga for the people" will become as popular and as well-known as any rock star yogi.

What say you about the mention of Anusara yoga (albeit in an off-hand way) in a primetime television show? Does it go along with what Mark Singleton said in the NY Times article that "yoga, and spiritual ideals for which it stands, have become the ultimate commodity", something to be sold just like a pack of cigarettes or a jeans label? Why not have commercials for all the name brands: Forrest, Jivamukti, Core Fusion, YogaFit, and of course, Bikram. I bet the ad agencies would line up to get a piece of that pie.

This post is not about Anusara yoga or John Friend. Replace those words with any other trademarked and name brand yoga and the post would be the same. The selling of yoga as a commodity.

As Tony Soprano would said, whaddayagonnado?


UPDATE:

uh oh....they're on to me! from site meter: "Atlanta, Georgia arrived from mail.anusara.com on 'linda's yoga journey'." I'd better lock the doors and pull the shades.

....wait...I hear a mob outside....instead of fire and pitchforks they're all holding Shiva's tridents that have been set on fire....quick! help me! they are banging down the doors yelling "GET HER!!" AAAARGHHHHH!! Save yourself!

7 comments:

Benita Wolfe said...

"....whaddayagonnado?" Open to Grace...

Linda-Sama said...

yup. just like in all yoga.

Arturo said...

hi Linda
i saw the same article and felt compelled to post it in my blog too. i was unaware of the $8 hot yoga classes were available when i visited SF two weeks ago, but Mission Yoga had offered pay what you can classes as early as a few years ago when i lived there. i felt while reading that the owner of the studio mentioned was going to end up as one of the other many types of studios because he was expanding in so many cities. it seems like a budget brand, which appeals to people during difficult economic times. and following the economic model of expanding franchises everywhere will certainly lead to wealth for the originator of the brand.
cheers,
Arturo

Brooks Hall said...

Linda: That is fascinating that there was an Anusara yoga teacher as a character on that show. Wow.

Anonymous said...

I could not believe it when I saw that episode which was very serendipitous b/c it is not a show that i what but my in-laws were visiting and they love it... of course the reference went right over there head but my jaw dropped!!!!!
Yoga is changing so much... makes me a little sad: (

Random Thoughts said...

IMO, the day is not far when we will see YJ conference commercial on prime time TV hosting a conference in India with a tagline saying "Let's teach some real yoga to the India yogis who have forgotten what yoga is all about". And I wont be surprised if people of India flooded the conference and drank in some yoga juice. I would be sad but not surprised at all.

Linda-Sama said...

I think you're right, D! every time I go to India Indians ask what I do. I say "yoga teacher." they say "I need good teacher, you should teach me." I say, "what?!? but you live in India where yoga was born, you have good teachers here."

crazy!