ASA Adjudication on Coca-Cola Great Britain

Coca-Cola Great Britain

1 Queen Caroline Street
Hammersmith
London
W6 9HQ

Date:

1 August 2007

Media:

Television

Sector:

Food and drink

Number of complaints:

1

Agency:

McCann Erickson

Complaint Ref:

28111

Ad

A TV ad for the sports drink, Powerade, featured a man who was training for his first triathlon. The ad showed different scenes of him riding his bicycle on the road. It appeared to be either early morning or dusk; the vehicles shown in some scenes had their headlights on.

Issue

The complainant challenged whether the ad could be seen to condone behaviour prejudicial to health and safety, because the cyclist was not wearing reflective clothing and was not shown to have lights on his bicycle.

BCAP TV Code

Response

McCann Erickson, responding on behalf of Coca Cola, explained that the ad was one in a series that followed a man training for his first triathlon. They said the ad was filmed in a "fly on the wall" style and explained that the method of shooting meant that they filmed without using traditional lighting equipment. McCann Erickson told the ASA that the ad was filmed during the afternoon in late March but said the lack of lighting equipment made it seem as though it was later in the day. They assured us that safety precautions were taken when filming the ad and said, at the time it was filmed, the cyclist was visible to passing traffic. McCann Erickson said the ad was no longer being broadcast and there were no plans to show it again.

The Broadcast Advertising Clearance Centre (BACC) said they did not consider that the ad was suggestive of danger, nor did they consider that the scenes depicted in the ad were in breach of the Highway Code and they had approved it on that basis.

Assessment

Upheld

The ASA acknowledged that Coca-Cola had no plans to broadcast the ad again. We noted the ad had not used traditional lighting methods and accepted that some scenes may have given the impression that it was later in the day than it actually was. Nevertheless, we considered that viewers would not be aware of the lighting aspect and were likely to believe that the ad was filmed in the early morning or at dusk. We considered that, because it appeared to be dark in some scenes and because, in many scenes, the traffic around the cyclist had their headlights on, the ad could give the impression that reflective clothing or lights were not required when cycling in conditions of poor visibility. We were concerned that the ad could be seen to condone hazardous cycling and therefore concluded that it breached the Code.

The ad breached CAP Broadcast (TV) Advertising Standards Code rule 6.7 (Health and safety).

Action

We reminded Coca-Cola and the BACC to take health and safety issues into account in future ads.

Adjudication of the ASA Council (Broadcast)

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