Slashdot Mirror


Award-Winning Ad Taken Off Air In Australia

bol_kernal writes "An award-winning advertisement on Australian TV for the new Hyundai 4WD has been pulled from being broadcast after stations received 80 complaints from concerned parents. The ad consists of a small child, age around 2 years, cruising down the road, window down, arm out the window, in his new Hyundai 4WD. He sees a girl of the same age standing on the side of the road, pulls over picks her up, and they go to the beach together. All in all it's cute, funny, and very well done. The ad aired late in the evening (8:30 pm or later), but it was pulled due to concern from parents about the copycat risk. What I want to know is, where has the responsibility of parents gone? Is the world becoming so serious — or so frightened — that fantasy is no longer allowed?"

3 of 471 comments (clear)

  1. Youtube link by physicsnick · · Score: 5, Informative

    Here's the ad on Youtube:

    http://youtube.com/watch?v=g37Z8Scbj8E

  2. Re:Yes by catwh0re · · Score: 5, Informative
    In Australia we have a law against advertising which involves displaying driving activity which is technically illegal.

    The law was made because the major "australian" car manufacturer and their primary opposition (ford) were both glamourising speeding, burn outs, doughnuts etc. in car advertisements. I doubt the law was ever meant to cover situations which are technically difficult to reproduce.. afterall hyperbole is permitted in advertising (as long as it's evidently hyperbole and thus not misleading.)

  3. Re:Simple answer: YES by cdrdude · · Score: 5, Informative

    Your link is broken, you've got an extra character in there. This should be right: http://youtube.com/watch?v=6GfdyIZcRH4

    --
    This sig is neither interesting, nor humorous. Including meta-humor.