Z
The driver in the car is legally responsible for ensuring that any children are wearing their seatbelts.
Racist - as rmelly says why was this guy not made of white chocolate?
Sexist - imagine the uproar if it was guys taking bites out of a woman.
Gratuitously violent - girls biting lumps of his a** on the bus, what example is this giving to Finglas denizens?
pot, meet kettlewhat example is this giving to Finglas denizens?
Personally, I prefer the old "Sure" ads some obviously naked young ladies sprayed the deoderant onto their torsos through a "tick" shaped hole in a big leaf, thus demonstrating the effectiveness of the spray on the treated area relative to every other part of their bodies.
I remember wondering at the time why would you cut a tick shaped hole in a leaf and then spray deodorant through it on to your armpits?
What if you were in a rush in the morning? How could you possibly have the time to (a) find a leaf, (b) cut a tick shaped hole in it and (c) be accurate enough, having only just woken up, to shoot the deodorant through the hole and hit the right spot. It could end up in your ear. Or eye. Or mouth.
I just thought it was mad. And I always assumed drugs might have been taken by those who came up with the idea.
Is that the same Germany where there is no speed limit on the Autobahns?i saw this last night and remembered this thread. Looks like it was shot inside an old VW van. It doesn't even look like there's seat belts built into the thing.
I really don't share the OP concern about road safety and seat belts use in releation to this ad. Speeding. Acohol abuse. Poor roads conditions. Driving without a license. Thats's how people get hurt not because of some silly ad.
Intersting that no one complains about using teenagers or children in tv ads. I find that very worrying and I believe is a practice banned in Germany for example.
Is that the same Germany where there is no speed limit on the Autobahns?
Yes the same, quite safe (relative to other European motorways) AutobahnsIs that the same Germany where there is no speed limit on the Autobahns?
Intersting that no one complains about using teenagers or children in tv ads. I find that very worrying and I believe is a practice banned in Germany for example.
I think you're wasting your time based on my own past experience. They are an advertising industry self regulatory body with no statutory powers. If they do eventually make a ruling in favour of your complaints then it will probably come long after the advertising campaign has run its course. If I had a problem with a specific advertisement then I would probably sooner complain directly to the company in question rather than bother with the ASAI. Maybe you could ring Joe about this?
Has anybody looked closely at the advertisement - which ran during children's television time - for a drink called Sprite Zero. A Nubile young woman goes to a vending machine; She buys Sprite; She becomes aroused. She pulls off her slinky top and throws it at a camera, which is being monitored by a voyeuristic security man. I am not sure what the message is, but I know it is not one which I want a 10 year old girl (or boy for that matter) to see.
Has anybody looked closely at the advertisement - which ran during children's television time - for a drink called Sprite Zero. A Nubile young woman goes to a vending machine; She buys Sprite; She becomes aroused. She pulls off her slinky top and throws it at a camera, which is being monitored by a voyeuristic security man. I am not sure what the message is, but I know it is not one which I want a 10 year old girl (or boy for that matter) to see.
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