Sharp-eyed viewers of Chevroletâs new emotional âHome for the Holidaysâ ad that debuted on Thanksgiving are asking why Chevy would feature a prominent landmark with the name of a major competitor â Ford â even if âFordâ was digitally removed from it?
Part of the extended 5-minute, 30-second ad shows an older woman apparently suffering from some form of dementia remembering things while being driven around by her granddaughter in a vintage 1972 Chevy Suburban. Part of that tour has them driving into the famous Ford-Wyoming theater in Dearborn, Michigan.
Thatâs where many people notice that in the ad the theaterâs marquis that in real life has âFord-Wyomingâ emblazoned across it instead reads just âWyoming.â
Did Chevy Edit Out âFordâ?
After Cowboy State Daily earlier this week dug into a readerâs inquiry about the large âWyomingâ sign that appears more than halfway into the ad, another reader asked: âSo, did Chevroletâs ad people photoshop out the âFordâ from the sign?ââ
Yep, thatâs what happened, a representative of the theater confirmed to Cowboy State Daily.
âWe did know before filming that our theaterâs name would not be displayed in its entirety to avoid confusion with Ford Motors,â said Courtney Clark, a spokesperson for the theater, which bills itself as the largest drive-in in the world.
She also said the theater isnât named for Ford Motors, which is what many people assume.
âOur theater was established in 1950 and named for the intersection at which itâs located, Ford Road and Wyoming Street,â Clark said. âWhile locals know the reason for the name, a national audience understandably may have been confused to see âFordâ in a Chevrolet ad.â
She said the ad, which was first shown on Thanksgiving during the NFLâs Detroit Lions and Green Bay Packers game, was a special moment for the drive-in.
âWe are honored to have been part of such a special film project,â she said. âWe have patrons today that continue to bring their children and grandchildren to experience the magic of a drive-in movie. And we love seeing that magic at work in the touching story between grandmother and granddaughter on screen.â
Calls to Chevroletâs ad agency, Commonwealth/McCann, about why it chose that particular drive-in and made âWyomingâ a source of confusion for people outside of the Dearborn and Detroit metro area were not returned.
Although the Ford-Wyoming theater in the Chevy ad has nothing to do with the Cowboy State, there are plenty of landmarks actually in Wyoming that are featured prominently in film and advertisements, such as Devils Tower, Old Faithful and the Grand Tetons.
Dale Killingbeck can be reached at dale@cowboystatedaily.com.




