Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Allen suing Golden Arches

Media mogul accuses McDonald’s of racist advertisin­g practices

- By Jocelyn Allison

McDonald’s has been hit with a $10 billion racial discrimina­tion lawsuit from media companies owned by Byron Allen.

The lawsuit alleges the Chicago-based burger chain pays higher prices to advertise with general market media companies than it does Black-owned companies, which submit pitches through a separate tier for content targeting African American audiences.

The suit was filed Thursday in Los Angeles Superior Court by Entertainm­ent Studios Networks, which owns a series of lifestyle television networks and Weather Group, which runs The Weather Channel.

Allen, a comedian, actor and media mogul, started Entertainm­ent Studios in 1993 and purchased the Weather Group in 2018 for $300 million, according to the complaint.

In addition to calling out McDonald’s two-tier advertisin­g structure, the suit alleges the company has falsely labeled Entertainm­ent Studios as an African American media company even though its content is directed to a general audience with networks like Pets.TV and Comedy.TV.

McDonald’s assumes that “because Allen is African American, his content must target that audience,” the complaint alleges. “That is a false assumption and is blatant racism.”

The company has refused to advertise on ESN Lifestyle Networks, which reach more than 180 million subscriber­s across the U.S., or The Weather Channel despite taking out ads with similar white-owned networks such as Animal Planet, Food Network or Travel Channel, the complaint alleges.

Being excluded from McDonald’s general market budget has caused Allen’s companies to lose out on critical advertisin­g dollars, the suit alleges.

In 2019, McDonald’s spent $1.6 billion on television advertisin­g in the U.S., with $5 million, or less than 1%, going toward Black-owned media, according to the

lawsuit.

“This is about economic inclusion of African American-owned businesses in the U.S. economy,” Allen, CEO of Allen Media Group, said in a statement Thursday announcing the lawsuit.

“McDonald’s takes billions from African American consumers and gives almost nothing back.”

The same day the lawsuit was filed, McDonald’s announced an initiative pledging to increase its advertisin­g spending over the next four years with companies owned by people from diverse background­s, a group that includes Blacks, Hispanics, Asian Americans, Pacific Islanders, women and LGTBQ individual­s.

The company pointed to that initiative when asked to comment on the lawsuit Friday, saying it has “doubled down” on those relationsh­ips.

“This includes increasing our spending with diverse-owned media from 4% to 10% and with Black-owned media from 2% to 5% of total national advertisin­g over the next four years,” the company said in a statement. The suit alleges McDonald’s has violated federal and California state law prohibitin­g racial discrimina­tion in contractin­g and seeks actual and triple damages, along with attorney’s fees and costs, with the total estimated at more than $10 billion.

 ?? CHRIS CARLSON/ AP ?? Comedian and media mogul Byron Allen poses for a picture Sept.5, 2019, in Los Angeles. Companies owned by Allen have filed a $10 billion racial discrimina­tion lawsuit against McDonald’s.
CHRIS CARLSON/ AP Comedian and media mogul Byron Allen poses for a picture Sept.5, 2019, in Los Angeles. Companies owned by Allen have filed a $10 billion racial discrimina­tion lawsuit against McDonald’s.

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