In GM-Ford Dustup, Detroit Dirt Is The Big Winner





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GM and Ford have created quite a stir with dueling plug-in EV ads that play off the 1% – 99% thing. GM got things going with the Cadillac ELR in a spot naturally bent to the smaller fraction, and Ford shot back with a closely tailored, insanely hilarious spoof featuring Ford’s C-MAX Energi. After watching the two go 10 rounds in the blogosphere for a couple of weeks, we can declare a winner…Detroit Dirt, whose founder Pashon Murray narrates and stars in the Ford ad.

We tried to access Detroit Dirt online just now and it seems that the site has exceeded its bandwidth, most likely because everybody now wants to know about this intriguing urban food waste-to-compost company and its dynamic founder, Pashon Murray.

So, we’re going to have to wait a while before we get to those details, but in the mean time let’s see how CleanTechnica got mixed up in the whole thing.

Detroit Dirt wins Ford GM fued
Food scraps by Nick Saltmarsh.

Cadillac ELR Vs. Ford C-MAX

After GM launched the Cadillac ELR ad, back on March 6 our sister site Gas2.org took the company to task for not divulging any of the EV tech that makes this high-end car so cool and daring for a brand that is not particularly well known for being cool and daring.

That was the extent of Gas2’s critique of the ad.

On March 11 CleanTechnica reposted the article (here’s the link) with an editorial update to the effect that the GM spot was intended to be a generic brand ad, and the choice of an EV to pilot the brand was “interesting” but secondary.

In the mean time, the ad became part of a broader conversation about wealth, work, and the deserving rich.

Things really started to erupt last week, when Ford launched its spoof ad. As recapped by our friends over at autoweek.com, the ad turns the race/wealth angle on its head, using African-American Murray and her striking Dante de Blasio styling to navigate a sometimes bleak looking urban landscape in search of food scraps to harvest.

She starts off in work clothes but by the end of the ad, Murray emerges all cleaned up and ready to go to some important meeting or dinner or wherever in her C-MAX.

We’ve been closely following Ford’s C-MAX MyEnergi Lifestyle solar package and the ELR, so we’re going to give GM points for inadvertently positioning cutting edge EV tech as part and parcel of an otherwise un-daring lifestyle.

However, Ford also gets some points because it packs that extra green punch into its advertisement by choosing a spokesperson who walks the walk, so we’re calling this one a draw.

Speaking of Detroit Dirt, we just checked and the site is still down, but here’s some information from a 2011 interview with Murray at Model D (modeldmedia.com).

Murray co-founded Detroit Dirt a few years back with Greg Willerer of the urban farm Brother Nature Produce. Some of the compost from Detroit Dirt is used at the farm, and the rest gets sold. As Murray says:

It’s what’s best for the environment and the community. We are trying to be part of a viable food system in Detroit and maybe help create a few jobs along the way.

Model D also notes that GM was an early supporter of Detroit Dirt, as later noted in the Autoweek piece, so who knows, maybe the next time we see Murray in a car ad she’ll be driving an ELR.

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Tina Casey

Tina specializes in advanced energy technology, military sustainability, emerging materials, biofuels, ESG and related policy and political matters. Views expressed are her own. Follow her on LinkedIn, Threads, or Bluesky.

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