LADBROKES CRITICAL OF A.S.A. RULING (Update)
9 January 2009
One complaint sinks two expensive television ads
Ladbrokes and its agency, M&C Saatchi have responded
with remarkable speed to the Advertising Standards
Authority ban on two of its television ads after a
single complaint from the public (see previous InfoPowa
report).
The duo placed a cheeky full page print advert in The
Sun newspaper, which will also appear in The Racing
Post, as a mock appeal to find the sole complainant
against its expensive television adverts, showing a
photoID kit head under the headline "Missing - a funny
bone."
The advert explains the company's tongue-in-cheek desire
to find the complainant to give him a hug and a bunch of
flowers to say sorry and can be viewed here: http://offlinehbpl.hbpl.co.uk/NewsAttachments/MAC/ladbrokesmissinglarge.jpg
On a more serious note, Ladbrokes has lodged an appeal
with the Independent Reviewer of ASA Adjudications to
review the decision, believing that it was an incorrect
application of the CAP (Broadcast) TV Advertising
Standards Code and effectively constitutes a ruling
against using humour in gambling advertisements.
John O’Reilly, the managing director of Ladbrokes Remote
Betting and Gaming, said: "Ladbrokes fully supports the
code of practice relating to gambling advertising but
this ruling is an example of political correctness going
too far. The idea that an advertisement using absurd
humour is somehow going to make gambling dangerously
appealing is nonsense.
"We don’t believe that banning humour is what the code
was designed to achieve."
The betting company ran two TV ads, described as
"pastiches of documentary-style filming", telling the
story of two adrenaline junkies who came to a fatal end
after taking one risk too many.
One of the ads featured a fictional eyepatch-wearing
great white shark operator character called Willem
Snyman, described as a "mentor and oceanic guru", who
talked about the demise of a shark-diving student. The
character recounts how his student's appetite for risk
and thrills saw him attaching bacon and sausages to his
wetsuit and diving into shark infested waters wearing a
seal suit, with predictably fatal results.
The other ad was narrated by the fictional J "Snake
Eyes" Kowalski, a pilot and skydiving pioneer, who told
viewers about the demise of a skydiving pupil who sought
the adrenalin rush of using smaller and smaller
parachutes until one day he jumped with just a potato
crisp packet, again with fatal consquences.
Both ads ended with the line "If only he'd seen
Ladbrokes Casino.com it would have quenched his thrill
buds."
When the ASA banned the ads, Ladbrokes and its agency
pointed out that the humour was "deliberately
exaggerated and ridiculous" and that the cautionary
nature of the stories "actively encouraged caution and
moderation over extreme behaviour and recklessness".
In April last year online gambling companies Paddy Power
and Intercasino became the first gambling companies to
have campaigns banned by the advertising regulator.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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