Maloof Brothers Star in Next Carl's Jr. Ad

Wil This Ad Help or Hurt Arena Campaign Measures Q and R


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Maloof brothers star in next Carl's Jr. ad

By Erik Siemers
Thursday, September 28, 2006





The latest advertisement by the Carl's Jr. hamburger chain tries again to target something young men covet.

No, Paris Hilton isn't lathering up another Bentley.
This time, it's the Maloof brothers - the casino magnates with a heritage of wealth that starts in New Mexico - featured in an ad campaign set to air nationally starting Oct. 16.

Joe, Phil, George and Gavin Maloof filmed a spot last month at the Palms Casino Resort in Las Vegas, which they own. In the ad, they feast on Carl's Jr.'s signature Six Dollar Burger washed down with a $6,000, 24-year-old bottle of Bordeaux wine.

"It took us 10 hours to film it," said Joe Maloof, who splits his time between Las Vegas, Sacramento and Los Angeles. He's 50 but said he looks 40 and acts 20.

"I guess we had to eat a lot of hamburgers. It was a lot of fun."
The Maloof family's wealth traces back to Las Vegas, N.M., where they secured the rights to distribute Coors beer in New Mexico, Maloof said. They now own the Palms - a celebrity magnet of its own - and the NBA's Sacramento Kings, while maintaining the beer business in Albuquerque.

Their lifestyle - that of wealthy bachelors plying their trade in the entertainment industry - is something Carl's Jr. marketers think will appeal to their target audience.

"Our young, hungry guy target audience would think they're cool guys because they're living the lifestyle every young, hungry guy wants to live," said Brad Haley, vice president for marketing at CKE Restaurants, the Carpinteria, Calif., company that owns the Carl's Jr., Hardee's and La Salsa fast-food brands.

The unlikely pairing came a few months ago when Andrew Puzder, CKE's chief executive, met the Maloofs, who told him they were big fans of Carl's Jr. burgers, Haley said.

"It's the truth. We're not lying," Joe Maloof said. "We eat at Carl's Jr. all the time. We pull up in the limo and get hamburgers at Carl's Jr. I've done that I don't know how many times."
Maloof said when the family bought the Kings in 1998, he bought a home around the corner from a Carl's Jr.

"All I did - and this is true - for one year was eat at Carl's Jr., probably twice a day and go to Arco Arena," he said, referring to the Kings' venue.

The Maloofs aren't likely to be as controversial as a previous Carl's Jr. representative. A 2005 ad featuring hotel heiress Paris Hilton engulfed in suds while sponging a car was referred to as "soft porn" by the head of Parents Television Council, an advocacy group that protested the commercial.

The Maloofs' ad shows the four brothers walking through the casino and greeting customers before settling down for burgers and expensive wine.

It will air in all markets that have Carl's Jr. and Hardee's restaurants. The company has 1,072 Carl's Jr. restaurants in the West and Southwest, and 1,945 Hardee's restaurants in the Midwest and Southeast.

"The idea is sort of that these guys that can have anything they want - the best wine, the best basketball team, the best casino in Vegas - think that the Carl's Jr. Six Dollar Burger is the ideal burger for them," Haley said. "We think the overall message helps reinforce the quality we put into that product in the first place."
Joe Maloof puts it more directly.

"I think they wanted to show four guys that have a lot of money - who are we kidding, we've got a lot of money," he said. "We're blue-collar guys with a lot of money that love their food."
 
I don't know who they listen to for public relations advice, but the person needs to be shot. In and of itself, the ad would be - at most - annoying. Right now, however, I cannot help but think it will just reinforce the stereotypical view some of the fence-sitters have about the Maloofs.

Joe Maloof puts it more directly.

"I think they wanted to show four guys that have a lot of money - who are we kidding, we've got a lot of money," he said. "We're blue-collar guys with a lot of money that love their food."

Good grief.

Hello, Joe? You're not a blue-collar guy, even though you may dress like one. You're a bleeping millionaire trying to get a bunch of blue collar people to agree to increase their local sales tax to build a new arena to house one of your playtoys.

Sometimes it's awfully hard to defend the actions of the Maloofs. This is one of those times. I wish, just once, they'd think before they acted. OR asked someone who won't just blow sunshine up their skirts.

"It's the truth. We're not lying," Joe Maloof said. "We eat at Carl's Jr. all the time. We pull up in the limo and get hamburgers at Carl's Jr. I've done that I don't know how many times."

Well, slap my knee and call me Oscar! That's different. That makes you one of us. I don't know how many times I've pulled up to Carl's Jr. in the ol' limo to get hamburgers.

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I honestly think they just don't have a bleeping clue.
 
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I don't think this could have come at a worse time.

this PR rep for the Maloofs should not only be fired, but put on a black list.

Sheeeesh.....ridiculous!
 
Tend to agree, VF. Just leave well enough alone, at least until AFTER the vote. Couldn't it wait a couple weeks?
 
Well, money can buy a lot of things. Girls, limo's, casino's, basketball teams, but it can't buy brains, or common sense, apparently.
 
Maybe we fans need to throw ourselves on the mercy of Carls Jr and plead for them to not launch this until AFTER the vote.

I didn't realize Joe had hit 50. Wonder if these guys are planning on staying batchelors forever?

I wish they'd spend some time wooing the people of Sacramento. I know they are angry/hurt at how they have been portrayed, but do something about it guys. Instead they are just reinforcing an image that many Sacramentans don't like.

Its too bad. I think they are good businessmen, who sincerely want to provide a good product, want to win and do put customer service first. I also know they have been good citizens by being involved locally and making many charitable contributions...giving back to this city.

I just can't figure them out on this PR thing, tho. I really don't know what they are thinking. :confused: Maybe they've just decided that local media is going to portray them a certain way, regardless of what they do. And to some extent, I think they are right about that. But still, why help them?

I suppose they might think they are just poking fun at their own image, but many won't see it that way.
 
I don't understand how people are getting on the Maloofs for saying and showing that they are just regular people... Yeah they have alot of money, but it's not like they are *******s about it. I like the idea for the commercial and I like the fact that the Maloofs have stayed relatively personable.
 
Sounds like a funny commercial. Look forward to seeing it before I pass judgement.

I could see how it may possibly be portrayed as negative is some peoples eyes. But what is the alternative? For the Maloofs to act like they are poor. They have a ton of money, everybody knows it, and it has nothing to do with the arena. If anyone connects the two they are letting their jealousy cloud their judgement.
 
Why is this ad so bad? I think it is cool. It gives our team and city alot of PR. I like it and can't wait to see the commercial and am still voting Yes on Q and R. How can this hurt there chances with the "people on the fence"? Just wondering why your saying this?
 
Why is this ad so bad? I think it is cool. It gives our team and city alot of PR. I like it and can't wait to see the commercial and am still voting Yes on Q and R. How can this hurt there chances with the "people on the fence"? Just wondering why your saying this?


it portrays them much as a sterotype that a lot of people on the fence believes.

i can safely say that one of the people that i know will vote no already, will use this commercial to point out to me that if the Maloofs can afford a "$6,000, 24-year-old bottle of Bordeaux wine." then they can afford to build the arena themselves. Pointing out to this person that those are two entirely different things, one running a business, the other completely irrelevent will do no good.

Now as far as fence sitters go, i believe if some of them have the same general attitude as the above "no" voter, this commercial will just simply push them to the no side, using the same above logic.
 
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