Airbag Contest a Success!
DETROIT -- With third-quarter sales sluggish
and its share of the domestic market down 11 percent since 1993,
General Motors unveiled a new instant-win airbag contest
Monday.
The new airbags, which award fabulous prizes
upon violent, high-speed impact with another car or stationary
object, will come standard in all of the company's 1997 cars.
"Auto accidents have never been so
exciting," said GM vice-president of marketing Roger Jenkins,
who expects the contest to boost 1997 sales significantly.
"When you play the new GM Instant Win Airbag Game, your next
fatal collision could mean a trip for two to Super Bowl XXXI in New
Orleans. Or a year's worth of free Mobil gasoline."
Though it does not officially begin until July
1, 1997, the airbag promotion is already being tested in select
cities, with feedback overwhelmingly positive.
"As soon as my car started to skid out of
control, I thought to myself, 'Oh, boy, this could be it--I could be
a big winner!'" said Cincinnati's Martin Frelks, who lost his
wife but won $50 Sunday when the Buick LeSabre they were driving hit
an oil slick at 60 mph and slammed into an oncoming truck.
"When the car stopped rolling down the embankment, I knew Ellen
was dead, but all I could think about was getting the blood and
glass out of my eyes so I could read that airbag!"
"It's really addictive," said
Sacramento, CA, resident Marjorie Kamp, speaking from her hospital
bed, where she is listed in critical condition with severe brain
hemorrhaging and a punctured right lung. "I've already crashed
four cars trying to win those Super Bowl tickets, but I still
haven't won. I swear, I'm going to win those tickets--even if it
kills me!" Kamp said that as soon as she is well enough, she
plans to buy a new Pontiac Bonneville and drive it into a tree.
GM officials are not surprised the airbag
contest has been so well received. "In the past, nobody really
liked car wrecks, and that's understandable. After all, they're
scary and dangerous and, sometimes, even fatal," GM CEO Paul
Offerman said. "But now, when you drive a new GM car or truck,
your next serious crash could mean serious cash. Who wouldn't like
that?" Offerman added that in the event a motorist wins a prize
but is killed, that prize will be awarded to the next of kin.
According to GM's official contest rules, odds of winning the grand
prize, a brand-new 1997 Cutlass Supreme, are 1 in 43,000,000.
Statistical experts, however, say the real chances of winning are
significantly worse. "If you factor in the odds of getting in a
serious car accident in the first place--approximately 1 in
720,000--the actual odds of winning a prize each time you step in
your car are more like 1 in 31 trillion." Further, even if one
is in an accident, there is no guarantee the airbag will inflate.
"I was recently broadsided by a drunk driver in my new Chevy
Cavalier," said Erie, PA, resident Jerry Polaner. "My car
was totaled, and because it was the side of my car that got hit, my
airbag didn't even inflate. But what really gets me is the fact that
the drunk driver, who rammed my side with the front of his 1997
Buick Regal, won a $100 Office Depot gift certificate. That's just
wrong."
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