Artandmylife has asked in comments if I’ve had any response yet from ALAC or the Advertising Standards’ Authority, in regard to my May 2nd complaint about the Lisa advert and its appalling victim blaming. The answer as at the time of writing this is:
- One email from ALAC acknowledging receipt and that my complaint would be forwarded to the appropriate person. I emailed back thanking them for the acknowledgement. No further response from ALAC.
- One email from the ASA acknowledging receipt. I emailed back thanking them for the acknowledgement. No further response from the ASA.
- My comment on the ALAC blog post about the whole advertising campaign is now out of moderation, after a bit of a wait. Joanna has a comment up there too, and big ups to her for steering me to this in the first place. ALAC has responded to the comments from both of us, in the blog thread, including the following:
The message in all three of our advertisements is that binge drinking increases the risks of harm to yourself or harm to others. The advertisements however are not about blame. We have conducted a lot of focus group testing (including with young women who drink) to ensure that the take out message from these adverts is about increased risks from binge drinking. At ALAC we are very clear that while binge drinking does increase your risk of harm, this does not mean that if you are a victim of a crime while drunk that you are to blame. This point did test positively with our target audiences, that the advertisement was about highlighting real risks from drinking and not about apportioning blame.The ALAC blog response also says they have received two complaints about the Lisa ad, in addition to "your phone call". I didn't call them
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On the issue of Dove’s Campaign for Real Beauty, which I mentioned a few days ago in relation to their fundraising for EDEN, it turns out that even those real women shots they are using in their advertising campaigns are airbrushed. Shame, shame, shame. Update: Please check out the links from twelve-plus-one about this in comments, it is possible that the New Yorker quote oversells the story and that it was only minor colour correcting not full airbrushing. Time will tell, hopefully.
6 comments:
It seems those photos may not have been retouched to the extent people think:
Here's AdAge's original article about the controversy, and a retraction.
I didn't call them. I suspect they're doing a cut'n paste from their response to someone else. Because surely we can't be the only two people complaining about it?
@twelve-plus-one, thanks for the links, I have updated the post accordingly. However in the second article from AdAge I note that the New Yorker hadn't responded at the time of going to press, so there may be some more back and forth to play out on this?
@joanna, so that means actually at least three people complained. You, me, the person who phoned (who it appears also sent a written complaint that they have cut and pasted that blog comment from). I suspect most people would have complained directly to the ASA rather than to ALAC.
Re the retouching - it's such a tricky one because with digital publishing everything gets hugely manipulated after the original photo is taken - colour correcting and tweaking of brightness, contrast and tone would be very normal even for newspaper images. I guess the point at which skin tones get evened is the point of no return? The whole campaign is so complicit - how could it not be when the company has to choose women that conform to the usual "standards" except for one small thing (like their body mass index) in order for an audience used to airbrushed perfection to warm to them instead of turning away.
I sent an email shortly after your first post, then after some time sent another. No response whatsoever and if I have to listen to that woman's whimpers while ALAC reminds me "bad girls get raped" one more time I may smash my television.
Thanks for the update. In the end I trashed my complaint because to be super honest the ad cut far to close to the bone for me and I couldn't put it into words. I feel now I should try again and write to ASA.
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