mike_intellivision said:
The actor (Jerry Lambert) would have been a contract employee. His contract may have included a "non-compete" clause which would not prohibit him from doing anything for a competitor of Sony for a certain length of time afterwards -- or not. Such a delay requirement would have lessoned the effectiveness of a "switching" commercial, if one could figuure out how to make it without being in copyright violations. So Lambert went from Holiday Inn Express to Sony to Bridgestone Tires. He also does some acting: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerry_Lambert_%28actor%29 and http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1208801/ Mike from Morgantown |
You wouldn't (necessarily) need to use the character though ...
I could be wrong but I was always under the impression that non-competition clauses were generally not enforceable; of course that could just be that (for a typical employee) the cost of going to court over a non-competition clause is more costly than the benefit it could possibly provide for the company.