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A New York City subway car is covered in Nazi imagery to promote the new Amazon television series The Man in the High Castle.
A New York City subway car is covered in Nazi imagery to promote the new Amazon television series The Man in the High Castle. Photograph: Spencer Platt/Getty Images
A New York City subway car is covered in Nazi imagery to promote the new Amazon television series The Man in the High Castle. Photograph: Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Nazi-inspired ads for The Man in the High Castle pulled from New York subway

This article is more than 8 years old

Mayor Bill de Blasio called on Amazon to remove ‘irresponsible and offensive’ advertisements for its dystopian new television programme

Amazon on Monday agreed to pull advertisements for a new television show featuring Nazi-inspired imagery from New York City’s subway system, hours after Mayor Bill de Blasio called on the company to do so.

The advertisements for The Man in the High Castle completely wrap the seats, walls and ceilings of one train on the busy shuttle line that connects Times Square and Grand Central terminal in midtown Manhattan.

The show depicts an alternate reality in which Nazi Germany and Japan have divided control over the United States after winning World War Two.

The advertisements include a version of the American flag with a German eagle and iron cross in place of the stars, as well as a stylized flag inspired by imperial Japan.

Representatives for Amazon and its television production arm did not respond to requests for comment.

The advertisements had been scheduled to run until 6 December, according to the Metropolitan Transportation Authority. In addition, Amazon has paid for 260 subway station posters to be displayed until the same date.

An MTA official who spoke on condition of anonymity said Amazon had asked for the shuttle train advertisements, but not the posters, to be removed.

The New York City Subway 42nd Street shuttle train is covered in symbols from Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan, to promote the Amazon TV series The Man in the High Castle. Photograph: Timothy A. Clary/AFP/Getty Images

In a statement earlier on Monday, De Blasio called on Amazon to remove the train advertisements, calling them “irresponsible and offensive to World War II and Holocaust survivors, their families, and countless other New Yorkers.“

The MTA had said the advertisements do not violate the agency’s content-neutral guidelines, which ban political advertisements.

The show is an adaptation of a Philip K. Dick 1962 novel, The Man in the High Castle that describes a version of history in which the Axis powers win World War Two and divide the United States into a Nazi-controlled East and a Japan-run West. All 10 episodes became available on the Amazon Prime streaming service on 20 November.

Frank Spotnitz, the show’s creator and executive producer, told Entertainment Weekly he agreed with critics that the advertisements could be seen as offensive.

“It’s very difficult with a show with subject matter like this to market it tastefully, so I understand they’re walking a very difficult line,” the magazine quoted him as saying on its website. “If they had asked me, I would have strongly advised them not to do it.”

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