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The adverts you love to hate

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Published Date: 27 March 2007
Commercials showing sex, religion or apparent cruelty to animals among those drawing most complaints
THEY have shocked and outraged, provoked and offended, all in the name of advertising.

And the definitive all-time list of the most complained-about television adverts has something to upset everyone.

Produced by the Advertising Standards Aut
hority (ASA) watchdog, the list includes some iconic recent ads, such as the "dead hamster" promoting Levi's jeans and an image of the model Sophie Dahl spread naked across a billboard to advertise perfume.

And ad makers, it seems, are sailing ever closer to the wind, with two current commercials already among the most complained-about in advertising history. The new offenders are the Department of Health's anti-smoking adverts, which depict smokers being hooked through the jaw and yanked back to their nicotine habit, and Cadbury's Trident gum, in which a West Indian poet exhorts the UK to try "mastication for the nation".

The anti-smoking commercials have already racked up nearly 800 complaints about the graphic imagery, making them the sixth most complained-about adverts ever. The Trident gum promotion has received just under 520 complaints and is in joint 11th place.

ASA officials are this week due to issue a ruling on whether complaints about the Trident gum commercial are justified. Some viewers were upset at what they saw as racial typecasting of the lead character - an entertainer in a nightclub - while others pointed out Trident was the name used for the Metropolitan Police's initiative to curb black gun crime in London.

Branding expert Neale Gilhooley, from Evolution Design in Edinburgh, criticised the Trident commercial as "a very poor introduction of a brand". He said: "It feels like an advert devised by a London agency, and people outside the big cities are going to struggle to understand that accent. I don't really understand how a comedian in a club is going to sell me bubble gum."

Adverts typically receive only one or two complaints but sex, religion or apparent cruelty to animals are sufficient to earn commercials a place near the top of any league table of objections, with hundreds of viewers registering their unhappiness.

Annoying viewers appears a speciality for chewing-gum manufacturers, with Wrigley's Xcite gum from 2003, which depicted a man regurgitating a dog, also making the shortlist. Jean maker Levi's also has a place in advertising infamy for poking fun at animals in its commercials. Its 1998 commercial, which depicted a hamster apparently dying of boredom after its wheel was taken away, reportedly drove some young viewers to tears and earned it joint 11th place.

Pot Noodle and Club 18-30 holidays both racked up huge numbers of complaints. And even the genteel world of Mr Kipling's mince pies provoked an outcry in 2004 when a commercial showed a woman called Mary actually giving birth in a church hall during a nativity play.

A 1995 leaflet for National Condom Week which depicted the Pope in a hard hat and the words "The Eleventh Commandment: Thou shalt always wear a condom" remains the second most complained-about advert, with 1,192 people protesting. It is followed by another advert involving sex - nearly 1,000 people complained about a poster for which the model Sophie Dahl posed naked on a fur rug in a campaign for Opium perfume.

Mark Banham, from the marketing website Brand Republic, said: "People are much more media-savvy these days and they are more aware of their right to complain.

"The fact you can complain online or just by picking up the phone makes the process easier, and that's no bad thing."

Public disgust

• THE commercial that has received most complaints is the 2005 TV promotion for the KFC Zinger Crunch Salad. It drew 1,671 complaints, most from viewers who felt the fact it showed call centre workers singing with their mouths full would encourage bad manners in children. However, watchdogs cleared it.

• SIXTEEN years after it was launched, Benetton's 1991 poster of a newborn baby remains controversial. The image was part of a wave of stark reportage-type pictures used by the company. However, the ASA decided the poster was a bad reflection on the advertising industry and ordered Benetton not to repeat the tactic.



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1

Grumpy,

27/03/2007 05:56:24

What about all these "Loan Consolidation" ads that are simply cruelty to people already in debt and who foolishly think it is is a way out of it.

Or the Cillic Bank ads with that guy shouting all the time - cruelty ot our ears! (Never mind the fact that Cillc Bang is very good at taking the enamel paint of cooker surfaces..........)

2

Billy Mac,

Australia 27/03/2007 06:24:56

Advertising is one huge big con trick. Marketing people are basically liars who dream up garbage to try to sell things to us that we either do not want or need. I can't believe the rubbish that is shown in tv adverts. Where are the statistics to prove that all the massive amount of money spent on advertising is not wasted?

3

JG,

Fife 27/03/2007 10:07:11

Can't personally see what was wrong with the "wear a condom" advert!

Currently, that "Picture" loans advert - "MUM! Where's me trainers?" "Oonder the bed" - MY Mum would have answered "Where did you bl**dy leave them?"

4

Yonthing,

27/03/2007 11:38:34

I'll bet the people who complained about the anti-smoking ads were the very same people who campaigned for the Smoking Ban.

5

AD,

chilly (but sunny-ish) Livingston 27/03/2007 11:45:48

I cannot stand car insurance adverts - particularly the Diamond and Sheila's Wheels ones, oh yeah, and esure - like Michael (I'm an oaf) Winner's going to make me want to go to them?!?!?!!! And, as has been pointed out here already loan companies - and yes, Picture "Dad's found ya scoo-ah" is REALLY annoying!!!

AAAAAAAAAAAARRRRRRRRRRGGGHHHHHHHHHH!

6

Smiley,

On ma bahookie 27/03/2007 11:47:49

#4

"Josh, dad's found your scoota'" :-(

7

Joanna,

Cambs, England 27/03/2007 12:30:53

The ones that annoy me are the also the loan ads.... especially when they 'paid off all our debts and we've still got money left over for a holiday'?!! No, you fool you've just borrowed more money.... and you've no doubt been forced to borrow it against your house..... read the small print!

The other ones that are irritating are the anti-wrinkle creams ..... 'look it works.... no wrinkles' says the twenty-something model. I also, don't believe for one minute that the more mature Hollywood actresses who advertise 'the because I'm worth it' products actually use them. No way, they'll be spending hundreds of dollars on much more expensive products than that...... and probably have had a bit of a lift here and there as well.

8

AD,

sunny Livingston 27/03/2007 13:50:54

#9 Joanna - yeah - and 17 year old skinny models advertising cellulite cream!

Johnny Vegas in his PG Tips ads - now THEY'RE cool!

9

Bradley,

27/03/2007 13:56:12

I dislike any ads that say:
You deserve it.
You've earned it.
Now is your time.
It's what all the buzz is about.
Are you tired of...
Because you're special
Because you're different/unique
You're important to us.

10

Lanna,

27/03/2007 14:24:53

#9 AD, #10 Joanna, Hi, have to agree with you there! Can't believe any of it!

Hi JG #4 long time!

HC #5, you jist want to see Daniel Craig advertising that line of sport wear!

11

yolanda,

27/03/2007 15:02:38

I'm glad I'm not the only one who can't stand the Picture loans one. She's half way through the conversation (a three-way one with her family. What bad manners!), and still has to double check with her "husband" how much they want to borrow. £25K?? Aye, right!

Another one that bugs me is the cold sore treatment one where she sticks a little transparent plaster on something that is NEVER a cold sore, and it's almost disappeared by the time the boyfriend has come up in the lift. Aye, right again. Why don't they get someone with a REAL coldsore? You know, the big crusty ones that weep... THEN we'll see how good their product is!

12

TheSmith,

Watching Digital TV 27/03/2007 15:55:51

I hate all loan adverts - especially,

adverts that emphasise ' our friendly advisors are here to help and won't judge you'.

Picture Loans - if you're drowning in debt and on the phone to one of these 'friendly advisors' I doubt you'd need to jovially check how much you'll need.

that one with the woman hugging a chimp. I don't believe for a minute that the folk are calling up the companies through their tears to experience their own 'gorillas in the mist', rather than anxiously hoping they wont be kneecapped by loan sharks.

13

TheSmith,

Watching Digital TV 27/03/2007 15:56:44

alright pedants it was an orangutang

14

Yowser2,

Edinburgh 27/03/2007 17:00:59

I think were all agreed here about the Loan Company adds that are particularly loathesome. Particualrly the Picture Loans add. Lordy, you'd think the bint was ordering a Pizza on the phone. And good job she ermembered it was £25,000 pounds and not £250,000, although they can probably afford it anyway with that huge house thry're in. Not really like the typical Picture Loan customer, sitting in they're drab council flat..blah, blah...blah...
And as for (One fromthe top!)Vorderman don't get me started!

15

JG,

Fife 27/03/2007 17:33:59

Hi Lanna, Joanna, HC
I always liked the old Kit-Kat adverts - especially the one with guy waiting for the polar bears to come out of their cave - and the Irn-Bru ads with Raul in them!!!

Did you notice how they say in those loan adverts "Pay back over 180 months" that's the next 15 YEARS - "only £235 a month" and if you lose your job and don't pay the house will go too. How stupid ARE these people?????

16

Bien E. Bien,

Montreal 27/03/2007 17:34:13

Here in Montreal there is a "loan consolidation" advert featuring none other than Paul Michael Glasier, "TV's own" Starksy from the original Starksy & Hutch series. I actually cheered when I first saw the advert (though in no way tempted to secure debt against my property), but after repeated viewings I am starting to find it somewhat depressing.

17

Lanna,

SCalif 27/03/2007 18:33:28

JG, I've seen the Raul ads on YouTube...they're pretty funny...I like the diet Irn-Bru one where Raul falls off of the diving board!! ;)

Hi HC, thought you'd like the visual!

18

JG,

Fife 27/03/2007 20:21:33

Hi Lanna - yes, at least those are funny. There is another car insurance one that really got on my thruppennies - "confused.com" - it was so dreadful they have actually changed it.

19

AJ,

Fife 27/03/2007 21:12:57

The adverts I like, are the ones where women are blatantly used as sexual objects!!!

The Flake ads where classic!!!

20

AJ,

Fife 27/03/2007 21:18:22

A knew that wid draw ye oot!!!

Here, whit aboot that schmuel boy thinking you were a bloke!!! Mibbee he feels the same aboot Daniel Craig as you do!!

21

AJ,

Fife 27/03/2007 21:20:09

The boy in the laundrette didnae dae it fur me!! However, the Shake n Vac wifie wiz no bad!!!

22

JG,

Fife 27/03/2007 21:20:45

#25 HC
Aye, true. But he made up for it with those buns of steel!

AJ

I dinnae mind the flake ads either - it's advertising one thing (well, maybe one of MANY things!) better than sex - CHOCOLATE!!!!!!!

23

Harryc,

27/03/2007 21:21:44

Most adverts these days are pretty harmless, unlike some I remember from my childhood. Fry's Turkish Delight, "Full of Eastern Promise" for example, that advert used to give me nightmares regularly, with it's scary music and bright pink imagery, god I used to hate it!!

24

Harryc,

27/03/2007 21:24:01

And not forgetting the Werther's Original kiddly-fiddling grandad, most disturbing!

25

AJ,

Fife 27/03/2007 21:41:56

HC,
It wiz a catchy wee tune, and she had calf muscles like Serena Williams....what mair d'ye want!!!

Am no believin' aw yer self depreciating sh*te, a reckon yer a cross between Sally Magnuson and Olga Corbett!! Jings what a combination!!!

Hi JG,
Still writing essays?

Am currently trying tae dae a plan, but the Cankster keeps interruptin' me!!

26

Harryc,

27/03/2007 21:42:04

I am quite young HC, it wasn't so much the weeping woman in those ads that freaked me out, it was the music and sheer pinkness of the images, horrible. And of course Werther's Original, that would have been enough to scare any child, this old man sitting perving over a wee boy with a bag of butterscotch, repulsive!!

27

Tim,

Perth, Scotland 27/03/2007 21:48:24

I despise all adverts with pseudo-"scientific"-sounding non-words in. "Pro-biotic" (any number of purported health drinks), "Pro-vitamin" (pantene) and worst of all, "el cassei immunitass" where the correct spelling is available to anyone with the quarter-braincell required to google for it.

OTOH the idiocy of some adverts can provoke an almost cathartic anger: whenever that `mmm, danone' advert comes on claiming to "enhance your natural digestive transit", who can resist the temptation to stand, wave slipper at the telly, and yell "YOU MEAN IT GIVES YOU THE *S****!!!"? ;)

28

JG,

Fife 27/03/2007 22:05:26

Aye AJ, that's what I've been daein - my 4,500 word essay. And the draft is submitted with a positive reaction - a couple of changes and I'm there!!!!

#31 HC

Never liked Turkish delight myself - it was like Camay (remember that?) covered in chocolate. As far as I'm concerned, get rid of all the filling, nuts and raisins and all that cr@p and just give me CHOCOLATE!!!! I liked the flake in the bath ad tae - a chocolate phallus wi' a braw soapy tub o' watter. The Cointreau ad was OK, but you'd have to take the wee balding guy out and substitute him wi' Christopher - THAT truly would melt a girl's heart!!! - Or as they say in Kelty "never mind the moon get them doon!"

29

AJ,

Fife 27/03/2007 22:05:35

Alannis Morisette!! Well, that's a better visual - the Frank Zappa angle must be yer language!!!

Yer story soonds scary btw!!

Ma plan is too boring for this page!! In short, it's a plan fur an essay on the political impact o' the Scottish church in the Middle Ages!! Telt ye it wiz borin'!!

30

JG,

Fife 27/03/2007 22:13:14

#35 Tim
Goad, ye're an emotional bunch in Perth, eh? Waving yer baffie at the telly? Dinnae you be jumpin' up too vigorously and cowpin' yer Horlicks, noo!!!

31

JG,

Fife 27/03/2007 22:41:56

I saw Christopher Lambert being interviewed once and he said his put his sexy, smouldering look down to the fact that he couldn't see very far - that might help him greatly should I ever be lucky enough to bump into him!! Mibbe stand mair o' a chance, eh?

My essay is a book comparision - 3 authors and how they deal with their subjects in a different way. It's no' too bad as I got to pick the books. Nuthin' religious, let me tell you!!!!!!! I don't envy AJ and the John Knox stuff - it wiz him that spoke of the "monstrous regiment of women" - jist as well he died when he did. He's have got his totties if he'd been alive today!

32

AJ,

Fife 27/03/2007 23:15:00

Unfortunately it's pre-Knox!

Scratcher time, G'nite HC and JG!!

33

AJ,

Fife 28/03/2007 09:53:41

Morning Horrible,

It's jist a bit o' personal development, but it'll be mair strength tae ma elbow!!! Couldny teach tho', especially tae bairns who widnae want tae listen - ma pal's a teacher, even in a guid school, it's a nightmare!!!

Onywey, am gonna be your agent!!:)

34

AJ,

Fife 28/03/2007 10:29:15

Soonds a great life Canky!!!

So have ye published onyhing? Or have ye tried?

Didye finish ma Pal's online book?

35

AJ,

Fife 28/03/2007 10:50:28

Sorry, a thocht ye'd a few under yer belt!! Ye did say ye had jist started, right enough!!

D'ye go tae work wi a skip?

Speak tae ye later!:)

36

JG,

Fife 28/03/2007 12:54:49

#45 HC
I picked "The Crow Road", "Rabbit, Run" and "stars and bars" (I did actually try "The God of Small Things" for a different question, but it was painful - and it won the Booker Prize!! I wasn't at all surprised to see it in the "List of Books No-one Finishes" - I'm going to give it to a pal of mine - if I suffered through it, I feel she should too - it's like an endurance test)

#46 AJ
Mine is just a bit of personal development tae. It's good fun though, as I like reading stuff anyway - it doesn't seem as dry as the religious things you're writing about.

37

AJ,

Fife 28/03/2007 13:03:18

JG,

It's only a small part of the course - Medieval Scottish History - luckily it's just one essay on the subject. Couldny dae a whole course on Scottish religion - hari kari time!!

I like Ian Banks a lot, although the Crow Rd kind of fizzles oot in a disappointing way- in my opinion of course!:) Sounds like an interesting assessment tho', especially picking the titles yourself!

38

JG,

Fife 28/03/2007 13:16:16

AJ
I agree with you - I thought the characterisations were very good, and as it got near the end it was as if he was struggling to finish it off properly so it just stopped.

Medieval Scottish history, eh? Vikings and all that - does it cover MacBeth as well? Naw I couldnae hack all the religious stuff either!

39

AJ,

Fife 28/03/2007 14:05:01

JG,

It mainly focuses on the golden era from David I to James IV. With the Wars of Independance being the only blip in the progress of Scotland developing as a nation.

It's very enjoyable and underlines how important a place Fife was, in the period that I'm studying. Pity about all the essays I have tae write though!!!:)

Is your course through Open Uni?

40

JG,

Fife 28/03/2007 14:22:37

AJ
There is a plaque with information about David I at Dunfermline Abbey (where he is buried) - well it's actually near the old Palace. From my own superficial forrays into Scottish history, I know that David I (like MacBeth, actually) was a very good king. You probably know all that anyway.

No, I've only just started with this studying business and I'm doing it through the local College. I have enjoyed it so far and will see what I decide to do next.

41

AJ,

Fife 28/03/2007 14:40:39

JG,

David was the fourth son of Malcolm III and Margaret, so Dunfermline was prominent in his modernisation of the Scottish church. He is credited with the Normanisation of Scotland, ie feudalism, and introduced many important Norman families into the Scottish nobility - the Bruces and Balliols in particular!!!

D'ye think he was responsible for Abbeyview?

42

JG,

Fife 28/03/2007 14:45:34

AJ
Hopefully only inasmuch as if you stand on the bed in the back bedroom of a western facing house in Abbeyview and lie across the top of the wardrobe, you can see the Abbey on a clear day. Unless there is a loud banging noise, in which case you'd be IN the wardrobe (Police raid!!!!).

43

Lanna,

watchin Raul swim 28/03/2007 16:11:21

Police raid?... who/whae, when, how??! ;)

Hello, chatterboxes, I love how discussing irritating and laughable adverts can turn into book reviews and history lessons!!! :D

44

AJ,

Fife 28/03/2007 16:43:18

Hi Lanna,

It's really an advert for further education!! JG and I are merely outlining the posibilities for mature students that exist in Scotland!!

Aint that right JG!!

45

Lanna,

watchin Raul swim 28/03/2007 17:23:22

AJ, mature?! oh, you mean the over 35's crowd! ;)

46

Lanna,

watchin Raul swim 28/03/2007 18:01:27

Hi HC, an advert to give ya a smile!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NR-YN--dA-0&NR

47

JG,

Fife 28/03/2007 18:04:15

AJ
Correct! It's also more fun when your career doesn't really depend on the results - I'm just doing this stuff for fun.

Hi Lanna
So who is Raul? Are you keeping something exciting a secret from us? It's a bit sexier when the repair man comes to visit all tanned, wearing only shorts and sporting a firm, taut body............ oh wait a minute ahm havin a wee flush tae masel'!!!!!

HC
And I really loved "MacBeth" - I've seen it on film, telly and in the theatre - a' that blood, lunacy and betrayal - quite gripping really. He was real enough and was actually one of the best kings Scotland ever had - unlike Shakespeare's version, where he is portrayed as a real baddie.


 

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