75,000 people sign up as foundation members to new Tasmanian AFL team

  • 6 months ago
After decades of waiting Tasmania's afl club has been officially launched with the name, colours and club logo unveiled last night.
Transcript
00:00 Foundation memberships for the Tasmania Devils Football Club went on sale at 6.30 last night
00:07 and as of a short time ago the club had sold 75,000 of them.
00:12 The initial target for the club was to sell 40,000 by October.
00:16 They've well and truly smashed that within 24 hours.
00:19 Now they are only $10 Foundation memberships, very cheap, very accessible,
00:24 but also this is a club with no players, no coach, no CEO, no staff, no ground to play at,
00:29 and a club that won't hit the ground running for another four seasons.
00:34 So it has been an enormous take up from the Tasmanian public and beyond.
00:38 Lots of debate around the unveiling of the club logo and branding.
00:42 The logo has been universally praised.
00:44 The jumper, lots of debate about the use of the Tasmanian state traditional Tassie map jumper.
00:51 But the club has moved to clarify today and clarify strongly that it is only a Foundation jumper
00:57 and not necessarily the jumper that the team will run out onto the field in in 2028 or 2029.
01:04 It was also the result of a survey and widespread community consultation undertaken by Jack Revolt
01:11 in the early part of this year.
01:13 So it's the Tassie map, the Tassie Devils and 75,000 people already signed up within 24 hours.
01:20 It's extraordinary the numbers.
01:21 I was listening to a radio report this morning where it was at 60,000,
01:24 so that's jumped 15,000 just today alone.
01:28 Chris, we're also hearing that Warner Brothers was consulted in the naming of the team.
01:35 Yeah, that's right.
01:36 So we all know the famous Warner Brothers cartoon,
01:38 the Tasmanian Devil who causes havoc in the Looney Tunes cartoons.
01:43 But what the situation was with the club and Warner Brothers was that there was an IP clash.
01:49 Warner Brothers owned the IP to the Tasmanian Devil.
01:52 The club wanted to use the Devil, of course, as the logo and the name.
01:56 The negotiations initially were very tough between the club, the AFL and also the company.
02:02 Things smoothed out a little bit though when Warner Brothers became aware
02:06 that Tasmanian Devil was the actual name of a real animal.
02:10 It was something that they hadn't quite considered.
02:13 And from there, things opened up nicely for the football club.
02:17 They entered into a shared IP arrangement, no money exchanging hands, no commercial agreement,
02:23 just a shared use of the IP.
02:25 So a good result for the football club and maybe Warner Brothers a little red-faced over that too.
02:30 Exactly, just like the Roadrunner.
02:31 [BLANK_AUDIO]

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