A complaint to the Advertising Standards Bureau is easy and quick.
Click on http://www.adstandards.com.au/pages/complaints.asp and fill out the form. It's mostly ticking boxes. Click 'send' and wait about a month.
At the very least you will cause an advertiser to spend a lot of time, effort and therefore money in defending the ad in question.
If your case is presented well you may have a success like ours below.
Thursday, 28 August 2008
Tuesday, 26 August 2008
One for us little guys
Several weeks ago we took exception to a magazine ad for a Mitsubishi Evolution sportscar which included the exhortations- "Hammer the straight" and "Scream through the corners". (See blog below for more detail.)
We felt this was a clear call for owners to drive recklessly.
On behalf of the Institute I lodged a complaint, as did others, with the Advertising Standards Council. Our complaint has been upheld. Mitsubishi Motors has been forced to change the wording on future ads to "Brute force with precision control". Not near so sexy.
We felt this was a clear call for owners to drive recklessly.
On behalf of the Institute I lodged a complaint, as did others, with the Advertising Standards Council. Our complaint has been upheld. Mitsubishi Motors has been forced to change the wording on future ads to "Brute force with precision control". Not near so sexy.
Friday, 1 August 2008
Irresponsible Advertising
An advertisement appeared in the SMH supplement Good Weekend on Sat 19 July 2008. It featured a Mitsubishi Evolution sportscar. The blurb below the pic contained the phrases- "Hammer the straight" and " Scream through the corners".
At a time when our young people are being killed needlessly on the roads because of bad driving habits this form of advertising can only be seen as irresponsible.
The Institute has lodged a complaint with the Advertising Standards Bureau and we urge you to do likewise. Go to http://www.adstandards.com.au/pages/complaints.asp
Please note that the only feature of the car being emphasised is the possibility of being able to be drive it as if a race car. Indeed new owners are directly encouraged to treat the road as a racetrack.
This approach to marketing is especially irresponsible at a time when all governments are taking steps to reinforce the road safety message, to young people in particular.
We wouldn’t allow carmakers to claim “drive this car when drunk and have fun” so why are we allowing them to say, in effect, “drive this car at breakneck speed on public roads and have fun”. Both statements are equally irresponsible.
At a time when our young people are being killed needlessly on the roads because of bad driving habits this form of advertising can only be seen as irresponsible.
The Institute has lodged a complaint with the Advertising Standards Bureau and we urge you to do likewise. Go to http://www.adstandards.com.au/pages/complaints.asp
Please note that the only feature of the car being emphasised is the possibility of being able to be drive it as if a race car. Indeed new owners are directly encouraged to treat the road as a racetrack.
This approach to marketing is especially irresponsible at a time when all governments are taking steps to reinforce the road safety message, to young people in particular.
We wouldn’t allow carmakers to claim “drive this car when drunk and have fun” so why are we allowing them to say, in effect, “drive this car at breakneck speed on public roads and have fun”. Both statements are equally irresponsible.
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