Did Samsung mess with the wrong president?

Did Samsung mess with the wrong president?

After the recent Big Papi and President Obama selfie turned out to be a Samsung marketing setup, the White House took a hard stance against any company using the President’s image for publicity stunts, CNET reports. “As a rule, the White House objects to attempts to use the president’s likeness for commercial purposes,” the White House press secretary Jay Carney said on Thursday during the regular briefing. “And we certainly object in this case.” However, Carney did not reveal how the White House is objecting, and whether Samsung has been contacted to remove the image.

David Ortiz, who endorses Samsung products, told The Boston Globe that the selfie idea was his own. “I wasn’t trying to do anything,” Big Papi said. “It just happened in that moment. It was a fun thing. I signed that deal with Samsung a few months ago. They didn’t know what would happen. Nobody did.”

The Red Sox have also denied knowing anything about the selfie in advanced.

However, these statements sort-of contradict Samsung’s own statement to the Globe on Wednesday. “When we heard about the visit to the White House, we worked with David and the team on how to share images with fans. We didn’t know if or what he would be able to capture using his Note 3 device,” Samsung said. The selfie was then retweeted by Samsung.

In a recent appearance on Ellen, President Obama joked about her famous Oscar selfiealso a Samsung marketing setup – which dethroned his own retweets record saying that it was “a pretty cheap stunt.”

Videos showing both Obama’s selfie with Ortiz and his “cheap stunt” comments follow below.

More from BGR: U.S. wireless carriers finally have something to fear: Google

This article was originally published on BGR.com

Related stories

This could be our first look at the Galaxy S5 Zoom

Buying a Galaxy S5 next week? Here's how to sell your old Galaxy S4 for the most money

New leak may expose Samsung's premium Galaxy S5 with a quad HD display