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After Lowe's got flack for bending to the will of the Florida Family Association, pulling their ads from TLC show All American Muslim, other companies are denying they cut advertising from the program that the FFA says "poses a clear and present danger to the liberties and traditional values that the majority of Americans cherish." The Florida group claims it has had success in its campaign to take down the TLC reality show that follows Muslim families in Dearborn, MI. But, of the 65 companies the Christian activist organization alleges support their cause, at least three deny having taken action against the program, report Media Decoder's Stuart Elliott and Brian Stelter.

While Kayak.com has joined Lowe's, removing its commercials from TLC, Campbell's Soup, Sears and Bank of America say their ad moves had nothing to do with boycotting the show, company spokespeople told Elliott and Stelter. The denials come as Lowe's faces backlash from the media, politicians, celebrities and angry customers. AdWeek called Lowe's out for not monitoring the conversation of their Facebook comment explaining their reasoning, which shows thousands of supportive, yet racist comments. The Guardian called their claim about responding to complaints from a "broad spectrum of consumers" "wishy-washy." Minnesota Rep. Keith Ellison chided Lowe's telling The Telegraph, "corporate America needs to take a stand against these anti-Muslim fringe groups," he said. On the celebrity front, Russell Simmons has taken on the cause, buying up the lost ad time, ensuring that All American Family doesn't suffer. And "concerned Americans" have since started a counter-petition at SignOn.org, asking signers to "stand up against the bigots of the anti-Islam/Islamophobia industry, whose most concerning complaint is that the show is intent on humanizing American Muslims--as though humanization were not an American value."