Save the 76 Ball - conocophillips http://www.savethe76ball.com/taxonomy/term/45/0 en LA CityBeat article: Americana- Saving Ray's Balls http://www.savethe76ball.com/citybeat2 <h3>[Americana] Saving Ray&#39;s Balls</h3> <p>We&#39;ve all experienced it: a late night when you&#39;ve run out of gas or are in desperate need of a bag of Funyons. Just when you&#39;ve given up, out of the unforgiving void emerges a beacon of hope in the form of a floating orange and navy orb. Such is the magic of the 76 ball, the electric signage of what were once known as Union 76 gas stations, a glowing (literally) example of effective branding for nearly half a century. That is, until ConocoPhilips acquired California Unocal in 2002 and instituted a plan to replace the balls beginning in 2005, enacting a &quot;destroy all balls&quot; policy for the felled orange giants. </p> <p> Enter Kim Cooper. The Los Angeles-based cultural historian&#39;s quest to save the eight-foot, 400-pound balls took shape when her local 76 station&#39;s ball disappeared, only to be replaced by a flattened disc with a red background instead of the familiar orange. &quot;I didn&#39;t know at first exactly why I was so upset when they got rid of the ball in my neighborhood,&quot; Cooper says, but as the campaign grew, she found that the 76 ball held a special place in the collective memory of West Coast natives. &quot;Several families have told me that it was their child&#39;s first word; that every time they drove past a 76 station their child would say &#39;ball&#39; and it became this special family memory.&quot;</p> <p> Cooper began the fight to save this icon of the American West from her living room with the site Savethe76ball.com, eventually bringing on her partner from the 1947 Project historical crime blog, Nathan Maransk. Together, the two amassed almost 3,000 signatures in an online petition that demanded ConocoPhillips save some of the balls to be put on display in museums. As a result of their efforts and the extensive media coverage thereof, the Texas-based oil conglomerate recently announced that it will donate several of the balls to museums across the country.</p> <p> Although thrilled with their success, Cooper says the battle for the fate of the balls is not yet over. The Save the 76 Ball Project is also asking that a few select, historically significant balls be preserved at their original locations, that ConocoPhillips foot the bill for transporting the unwieldy orbs, and that a ball be given to the original designer, Ray Pederson, who built and hand-painted the first ball himself for the Seattle World&#39;s Fair of 1962. </p> <p> -Ayse Arf, from <a href="http://www.lacitybeat.com/article.php?id=4947&amp;IssueNum=190" target="_blank">LA CityBeat</a></p> http://www.savethe76ball.com/citybeat2#comment conocophillips historic preservation ray pedersen victory Sat, 27 Jan 2007 10:07:53 -0800 kim 130 at http://www.savethe76ball.com My Call to ConocoPhillips http://www.savethe76ball.com/my-call-to-conocophillips <p>The day before yesterday, while idly discussing the ST76B project, my flapjaw compatriot asked, what has ConocoPhillips said?&nbsp; And I repeated, nearly verbatim, Lara Campbell&rsquo;s statement (she of CP Communications and Public Affairs, whose words we posted here 11 March).&nbsp; To which my comrade countered, that if I hadn&rsquo;t made the effort to open a dialogue with them, then well, I was really lame.&nbsp; My friend may be short on eloquence, but long on wisdom.&nbsp; Why hadn&rsquo;t I called them?</p> <p>So yesterday morning I picked up the phone and gave them a ring.&nbsp; I was routed to the voice mail of a very pleasant-sounding employee named Sylvia Hansen in &ldquo;External Communications.&rdquo;&nbsp; I left a short and equally pleasant message about us, and them, and about opening a dialogue, and how we could work toward a win-win situation, and so forth, and that I very much looked forward to hearing from her at her earliest possible convenience.</p> <p>And now we wait.</p> <p>What we have to discuss with ConocoPhillips isn&rsquo;t terribly complicated.&nbsp; We are asking of CP that a) we work with them and the LA Conservancy to select some historically significant 76 stations that will retain their balls, and b) that the now-removed balls be offered to collectors for purchase, instead of destroying them, and that CP gift 76 balls to American signage museums so that future generations may enjoy them.</p> <p>We wish ConocoPhillips no vicissitudes, but the campaign, including its boycott, is gaining great momentum and amazing supporters.&nbsp; It would seem a no-brainer that they would wish to avoid bad press, especially in these times when Big Oil ranks right alongside Satan and al-Quaida in popularity.&nbsp; But in the interest of full disclosure I want it known that I&rsquo;m not of that ilk, disingenuously decrying high gas prices while still paying for the stuff.&nbsp; In fact, I own royalty interest in CP subsidiary Burlington, so far be it from me to bite the hand that feeds (despite my issues with their manner of foreign investment, but that&rsquo;s another topic altogether).</p> <p>So call me, ConocoPhillips.&nbsp; Let&rsquo;s confab.&nbsp; You&rsquo;re talking to one of your own. &nbsp;</p> <p>I foresee great things for both of our camps, if we walk hand in hand toward this rotating, rising sun together.</p> http://www.savethe76ball.com/my-call-to-conocophillips#comment conocophillips contact dialogue nathan&#039;s blog Fri, 16 Jun 2006 10:57:58 -0700 nathan 80 at http://www.savethe76ball.com Los Angeles Magazine Article http://www.savethe76ball.com/lamag <p>Thanks to the good folks at <a target="_blank" href="http://www.lamag.com/Me2/Default.asp">Los Angeles Magazine</a> (April issue, not yet online) for the swell piece on the campaign to Save the 76 Ball. </p> <p>We are tickled to see our Ray's balls next to the Bettie Page feature, and further tickled by the ConocoPhillips spokesperson's amusing claims that they had heard <em>nothing</em> about any campaign to Save the 76 Ball--really? so the calls from the BBC, <em>LA Business Journal, Brandweek</em>, KTLA, KABC and <em>Daily Telegraph</em> didn't go through?--and that anyway, they had heard <em>many more</em> complements than complaints about the new signs.</p> <p>Nice work, PR flack! That's what the boss men want to hear!</p> <p>...now the <em>stockholders</em>, on the other hand, might be interested in knowing that as of today, 1493 people have <a target="_blank" href="http://www.petitiononline.com/mod_perl/signed.cgi?76ball&amp;1">signed the petition</a> supporting the retention of the balls, most pledging not to purchase gas from your stations unless an orange sphere flies high above!</p> <p>Take special note of signatory Charles Vaughan (#1440), who proclaims &quot;$300 in personal gasoline expense a month and well over $1000 for my company is now being spent at Exxon.&quot; Ouch! That's a pretty expensive side effect from a failed re-branding attempt!</p> <p>So c'mon, let's Save Ray's Balls! It's not too late! </p> http://www.savethe76ball.com/lamag#comment conocophillips los angeles magazine pr save the 76 ball spin Thu, 30 Mar 2006 08:14:48 -0800 kim 63 at http://www.savethe76ball.com Found! Vintage 1962 World's Fair footage of Union 76 Skyride http://www.savethe76ball.com/worldsfair <p>Original <a href="http://youtube.com/watch?v=6Dya3lRHCpM" target="_blank">8mm footage</a>, courtesy of Alan Eastlund, of Ray Pedersen's design for the Union Oil Skyride exhibit at the Seattle Fair, which inspired the endangered 76 Ball design.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><object width="425" height="350"><br /> <param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/6Dya3lRHCpM"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/6Dya3lRHCpM" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="425" height="350"></embed></object></p> http://www.savethe76ball.com/worldsfair#comment conocophillips history preservation savethe76ball seattle skyride unionoil worldsfair Mon, 20 Mar 2006 13:58:32 -0800 kim 57 at http://www.savethe76ball.com Finally, A Statement From ConocoPhillips http://www.savethe76ball.com/cpstatement <div> <p>After millions of Southern Californians were alerted to the threat to the 76 Ball following stories on KTLA and KFI, ConocoPhillips finally issued the following statement, after a request for comment from KABC television. They wouldn't talk to the BBC, Brandweek, L.A. Business Journal, KTLA or KFI. Gee, what changed their minds?&nbsp;</p> <p>Below please find ConocoPhillips' statement regarding the change to the 76 ball: </p> <p>ConocoPhillips is implementing a nationwide transition of its 76, Phillips 66 and Conoco branded stations to a common image. The intent of this transition is to leverage the strengths of each brand while also offering consistency in appearance across our brands. Thus, the formerly orange 76 logo is now red. </p> <p>We appreciate motorists' loyalty to the orange and blue ball, and hope they will continue to use ConocoPhillips' gasolines and motor products. Though our look is a little different, the quality of our products and our commitment to our customers remains the same.</p> <p>Regards, <br />Lara Campbell&nbsp; ConocoPhillips Communications and Public Affairs </p> </div> http://www.savethe76ball.com/cpstatement#comment branding conocophillips corporate doubletalk save the 76 ball Fri, 10 Mar 2006 20:43:08 -0800 kim 54 at http://www.savethe76ball.com Print Out A Card to Show Gas Station Owners You Love Their Ball http://www.savethe76ball.com/76ballcard <p>Phil Goldwhite, official designer of the Save the 76 Ball campaign, has created a handy business-card-sized PDF file that 76 fans can <a target="_blank" href="http://plasticmuse.com/Download.html">download and print out</a>. This card reminds station owners that the ball is a prime reason we buy our gas from them, and warns &quot;lose the ball and you lose this customer!&quot;</p> <p>Also available: a card to give to gas stations that have lost their ball, explaining why they've lost your business.&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> http://www.savethe76ball.com/76ballcard#comment boycott card conocophillips pdf phil goldwhite save the 76 ball Wed, 15 Feb 2006 19:02:08 -0800 kim 43 at http://www.savethe76ball.com Sign the Petition http://www.savethe76ball.com/petition <p>To sign this petition, click <a href="http://www.petitiononline.com/76ball/petition.html" target="_blank">here</a>.&nbsp; </p> <p>To: ConocoPhillips </p> <p>We, the undersigned, as consumers with an abiding fondness for the striking, historic and uniquely Californian blue and orange ball-shaped Union 76 logo, be it on tall metal poles or car antennae (since 1967), hereby call on ConocoPhillips to reconsider their alteration of the 115-year-old brand, to cease replacing spherical blue and orange 76 balls at gas stations with flattened blue and red disks, and to restore the beloved spheres to the poles where they belong. If ConocoPhillips does not demonstrate greater respect for the the history and goodwill associated with the blue and orange 76 ball, we will be taking our business to other gas sellers. </p> <p>This petition is being launched on January 31, six days after ConocoPhillips posted fourth quarterly earnings of $3.7 Billion, and we call for a sincere response to our concerns before the announcement of their next second quarterly earnings. </p> <p>Sincerely, </p> <p>The Undersigned </p> http://www.savethe76ball.com/petition#comment 1967 conocophillips historic preservation nascar oil petition save the 76 ball signage Mon, 30 Jan 2006 20:37:03 -0800 kim 31 at http://www.savethe76ball.com