Advertisement

‘Pics or it didn’t happen.’ DJs paid to hype up Google phones never had them, feds say

DJs told their listeners how much they loved their new Google Pixel 4 phone — but prosecutors said most didn’t have one.

Now Google is set to pay $9 million and iHeartMedia is set to pay $400,000 to ”resolve allegations that Google paid DJs at iHeartMedia to offer misleading personal endorsements of the Google Pixel 4 cell phone, even though most had never used the phone,” according to a news release from California Attorney General Rob Bonta.

McClatchy News reached out to Google and iHeartMedia on Nov. 29 and is awaiting a response.

In 2019, Google teamed up with iHeartMedia for an ad campaign for the Google Pixel 4, officials said.

Google told radio DJs to “describe their supposed personal experiences with the Pixel 4” even though the phone wasn’t available and Google refused to provide the DJs with the phone, officials said.

Google wrote scripts for the radio personalities, saying the Google Pixel 4 captured the most pristine night photos of their son’s football game, a meteor shower and even a rare spotted owl that landed in their backyard, according to the lawsuit.

“Pics or it didn’t happen, am I right?,” the script read, according to the lawsuit.

But the pictures, in fact, “didn’t happen,” officials said, violating California’s False Advertising Law and Unfair Competition Law.

Google is set to pay $9 million, of which $2.7 million will go to California, according to the release. iHeartMedia is set to pay $400,000, including $125,000 for California.

“It is common sense that people put more stock in first-hand experiences. Consumers expect radio advertisements to be truthful and transparent about products, not misleading with fake endorsements,” Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey said in a news release from the Federal Trade Commission.

The ads ran 29,000 times between 2019 and 2020, FTC officials said.

In 2019, before the ads were recorded, an employee at iHeartMedia reached out to Google’s media-buying agent asking for phones to be sent to the radio personalities, according to the lawsuit.

“We cannot require talent to use ’I’ in voiced spots when they have not physically used the product. For this reason, we may receive spots from stations that adjust the tense slightly to remove the personalization of ’I,’” the email said, according to the lawsuit.

A Google employee responded to the request, saying the company was not able to give the radio personalities the phone because it wasn’t on the shelves yet, according to the lawsuit.

Adding to the monetary penalties, Google is facing a 20-year order that prohibits the company from making misrepresentations or hiring endorsers to mislead consumers on products, officials said.

“Asking DJs to share personal experiences about a product they had not used is misleading – and a violation of state consumer protection laws. As Attorney General, I won’t stand by when consumers spend their hard-earned money based on a lie,” Bonta said in the release.

Rihanna’s lingerie company fined $1.2 million for misleading customers, prosecutors say

Attorney behind thousands of Northern California ADA lawsuits pleads guilty in tax case

‘Poisonous’ level of marijuana in caterer’s food derails wedding, Florida lawsuit says

A Miami federal lawsuit over Velveeta seeks over $5 million from Kraft Heinz