To whom it may concern,Also I should say that I am hoping to write in response to the points Anjum has raised here when I get a chance, but given my real life at the moment it may be a while.
I am writing today to express my concern and dismay in relation to the "Lisa" ad currently being screened by television stations on behalf of the Alcohol Advisory Council (ALAC), as part of the campaign. While I have not recorded an exact time when the advertisement has screened, it can be viewed at the following website: http://www.hadenough.org.nz/Media.aspx
1. Background
The "Lisa" advert is part of a series of three advertisements all graphically portraying a series of negative results from excessive drinking. They are part of the Had Enough campaign from ALAC which seeks to address the problems around binge drinking in our society. All three advertisements seek to blame the drinker involved for the negative result towards the end of the advert; drunken brawls ("Danny"), serious harm to a child ("Mark") and rape ("Lisa").
I have seen all three advertisements screened on free to air television during prime-time viewing, including the Lisa advert which I have seen twice, in addition to viewing it online as detailed above.2. Breaches of the Advertising Standards Authority Codes
I believe the Lisa advert breaches two parts of the Ethics section of the Codes,
namely:3. No advertisement should be misleading or deceptive or likely to mislead or deceive the consumer.
4. All advertisements should be prepared with a due sense of social responsibility to consumers and to society.2.1 Misleading/deceiving the consumer (Code of Ethics point 3)
The context of the "Lisa" ad is important; in both of the other adverts in this campaign, "Danny" and "Mark", the blame is correctly apportioned. However Lisa has not done anything wrong. She has merely gone out and had a good time, including drinking a lot of alcohol. Unlike Danny and Mark, Lisa has not hit anyone, become abusive or unpleasant, or acted obnoxiously towards others. As part of a campaign that seeks to encourage New Zealanders to think about their binge drinking habits, it is not readily apparent that Lisa has a problem to address.The "Lisa" advert gives the clear impression that women who get drunk are putting themselves at risk of rape or sexual assault. In fact, it is rapists who are responsible for rape, not those who are their victims. It is misleading to imply that Lisa is somehow to blame for the sexual response of the man who bundles her away at the end of the advertisement. It is deceiving to give viewers the impression that if only women did not drink, or did not drink a lot, there would be fewer sexual assaults in our society.
2.2 Lacking due sense of social responsibility to consumers and to society (Code of Ethics point 4)
For many years now those who are concerned about rape have been battling a number of myths about this serious form of violence. First and foremost amongst these harmful myths is the patent un-truth that women are to blame if they are raped. As mentioned above in 2.1, rape is never the fault of the victim, it is the responsibility of the rapist. No one asks for rape. No one's actions are such that they deserve to be raped. The "Lisa" advert, as part of a series of ads that seeks to blame drinkers for negative outcomes, clearly implies that Lisa's rape is the fault of her drinking.
Another rape myth that the "Lisa" advert unhelpfully perpetuates is that rapes happen in dark alleys, and that the rapist is likely to be a stranger. In fact research
consistently shows that the vast majority of rape victims will know their rapist, and the average woman is at far greater risk of rape around her friends in a domestic setting than in a bar amongst strangers. National Rape Crisis research from 1999 found that only 3% of the sample studied did not know their rapist, and that two thirds of abuse in the study happened in the homes of either the victim or the offender. More information about this research can be found here.
The "Lisa" advert irresponsibly reinforces the incorrect belief that women are most at risk from strangers, and when they are out on the street. By taking this approach I believe ALAC's advertisement lacks a due sense of social responsibility to both consumers and society.
3. Suggested Action
The outcome I would like to see is for ALAC stop seeking to screen this advert in the short term and that they re-shoot it to address the points that I have made above. As a teetotaller myself, in general I am supportive of ALAC campaigns that seek to highlight the negative consequences of drinking. However when that good intention is expressed in a way that blames women for rape I believe it is socially irresponsible and detracts from the good work that ALAC is doing in encouraging responsible drinking.
Yours sincerely,
Julie Fairey
CC: ALAC (via email), ASA (via online complaint form), The Hand Mirror (via blog post)
Friday, 2 May 2008
Money Meet Mouth - My complaint to ALAC
at
1:52 pm
by
Julie
Further to Maia's original post on the ALAC ad perpetuating rape myths, and my own post pointing out how to make a complaint, here's what I've sent to ALAC and the Advertising Standards Authority today. Sorry for the delay, I've had stuff going on in real life which has resulted in my blog absence for most of the last two and a half weeks.
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11 comments:
I am sp glad submissions have been made. I saw on Close Up last night that the ads are beeing reviewed by the advertising standards people this coming Tuesday. I was horrified when Sainsbury chuckled "some people even think this ad is blaming women for rape" snigger. Why don't people get this! When the ad first came on I pointed it out to my (male) partner and he disagreed with me until he'd seen it about 5 times and now he can totally see my point of view on the ad and thinks its awful - but he didn't notice the implication for a start (arrrggghhh)
Thanks very much for your letter, I used some of your work on rape myths for my own letter.
I am a single man who doesn't go out drinking and I didn't notice the implication for a start. In fact I had to listen to the last few seconds very carefully to "get" what it was implying. I'm sure there must be other fear buttons they could push although, naturally, I have no idea what they might be.
Have you had a positive response to your letter?
The board's (or committee's) response to the LTSA's wllfull confusing of two different legal definitions of speed suggests you may be facing an uphill struggle to get the ad changed.
What is your veiw on the earlier ad where the binge drinker leaves in a taxi with the guy from accounts? I always felt that came close to giving the same messagein the form of "are you trying to get me drunk?"
@Kevyn, only had responses acknowledging receipt so far, and I think that's fair enough as I only sent the emails the day I posted it here. artandmylife's comment above indicates that the ASA will be looking at the ads as a whole, in response to a large number of complaints, this week coming.
In the ad with the woman leaving with Thingy from accounts (Darryl? Neville? I can't remember) it is more a matter of "oops I got drunk and slept with someone I wouldn't normally find attractive" as opposed to being raped. Under the law drunken consent is still consent, but there doesn't seem to be an issue in the earlier ad with consent, whereas in the new ad there clearly is.
Will update readers on any response I get from ALAC or ASA.
I didn't realise that ALAC had a blog until now, but since they have a post about the ads, I'm going to be leaving my letter there too.
Hey guys- it's really great to hear more men open and willing to listen seriously to women on this type of issue. While women can and do take precautions to defend themselves, men as a whole need to own our attitudes and own actions. Rape is not something that just happens when shadowy figures spring out at night. As a society, we definitely don't believe that victims are responsible for preventing their crimes, however the exception for many men appears to be rape, where we are skeptical of women who had any relationship with their alleged rapists, or who even deliberately evoked some attraction. We know we're able to control our own feelings, but we like to pretend we can't when it comes to sexual attraction. In the case of rape, there are serious consequences of that view, and it just doesn't hold up to scrutiny as I'm sure you'll agree.
I'm particularly pleased you explained the reality that most rapes are domestic, perpetrated by people the victim knows and trusts, Julie. That's really the worst thing about that ad- they could easily have made an ad with someone raping their partner due to binge drinking, which would be much more socially responsible, and reflecting the realities of rape. They've previously done similar things with binge drinking causing relationships to break down.
Having seen the ad in question, I'll probably also add my own complaint along the same lines. Hopefully more voices will, at the very least, persuade them to learn more about the realities of rape for their next campaign.
@Joanna, thanks so much for pointing out that blog post, I am going to put a link to the posts here on that ad in the comments there. I actually agree with a lot of the points the ALAC blog makes, that we need ads that point out the brutal realities of binge drinking. But... (see above)
@Julie good luck with them actually moderating your comment and letting it show up! But then again I never heard back from ALAC after I sent in my comment either. Great response there, ALAC!
Thank you. I have MySky and usually zip through the ads at a million miles an hour, but even at high speed I was horribly offended by this.
I agree that it is the rapist who is the wrong-doer, and obviously one hopes they are caught and fully prosecuted. BUT ... (chooses words carefully) is the ad not valid in alerting women to the dangers (ie possible consequences) of getting drunk? If a woman gets so 'out-of-it' she is less likely to be able to fend off an assault and even less likely to be able to identify her attacker afterwards. In a Utopian society we would all be able to get completely wasted and still make our way home safely, without being assaulted or robbed, but in the real world that is not what happens.
Maybe ALAC should perhaps also run a similar ad where a young drunk male gets rolled on his way home ...?
- Simon
Have these ads been on Tv this week (I haven't seen much TV)? Anyone know the outcome of the ASA hearing last week? Its not on their website
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