Showing posts with label sex industry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sex industry. Show all posts

Thursday, February 5, 2015

Sex toy retailer creates a potentially deadly road distraction




Today's astoundingly irresponsible marketing idea is brought to you by Adam & Eve, an online sex toy store.

According to Adrants' Steve Hall, four of these trucks featuring model Bree Olsen will drive across the United States.

The brand wants drivers(!) to photograph the trucks on the road and enter to win... ...a traffic ticket? a multi-car pileup? A horrible, violent death?

Via Facebook
A press release quotes Adam & Eve Marketing Director Chad Davis:

"We are incredibly excited about the opportunity to bring Adam & Eve to the public this way. We are encouraging drivers who run across our trucks along I85, I95, I75 and I77 to send us pictures of the trucks to track their effectiveness and possibly win prizes."

It reminds me of all the times lingerie billboards have been accused of distracting drivers. Except this billboard is moving. And they want you to photograph it.

Ugh.

Thursday, October 9, 2014

PornHub's "SFW" billboard removed from Times Square



PornHub, the internet sexual content provider recently known for dabbling in music, managed to score an earned media hit by getting their new billboard forcibly removed from Times Square, NYC, within 24 hours.

Gothamist writes, "though an advertisement for a porn site would have fit in on 42nd Street a mere 20 or so years ago, the city's long since swapped out the peep shows for a Ripley's Believe It Or Not, and sadly, Pornhub's billboard was removed only hours after its first appearance. We can't have anything fun anymore."

Apparently, a neighbouring hotel managed to get the billboard yanked (so to speak).

Seems like a silly controversy to me, considering competing porn site Brazzers had a rather saucy "get rubber" billboard up there four years ago, complete with sexualized models.

You could say that the PornHub billboard was promoting even safer sex... at least for the viewer.

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Wasn't the Eye of Sauron always a big...?



Okay, perhaps you're not as jaded as me. But I got more than one giggle out of the yonic symbolism in the manifestation of evil in Peter Jackson's film adaptation of Lord of The Rings.

When I saw this on Ads of The World, however, it occurred to me that perhaps I wasn't the only adman who saw naughtiness in Mordor:


It's just the latest in a trend towards ads that take the "sex sells" axiom to absurd extremes.

Unlike the unappetizing "food porn" campaign I wrote up in November, however, this one at least is literally selling sexuality. Even if it betrays a certain film nerd fetishism in the creative team:



You may remember that gag from Spaceballs:


The other two are more original, but less impactful:




The campaign is by Kinga Grzelewska, Marcin Nowak, Bart Biały and Łukasz Gromkowski at Lowe, Warsaw.

Thursday, May 2, 2013

Transactional sex as a student summer job


Ads for "Sugar Daddy" hookup sites are always a little unsettling, but I think this is the fist one I've seen that comes right out and says that keeping company with an older, richer man is a job.

According to Adrants's Steve Hall, the billboard was posted in Los Angeles by ArrangementFinders, which is part of the Ashley Madison internet infidelity empire.

The woman in the billboard is Bree Olson, retired adult entertainer.

Other "Sugar Daddy" campaigns:

Apple iPayforsex?
Sugar Daddy site celebrates Women's Month
Don't let your daughters grow up to date our clients 



Thursday, March 7, 2013

"Filthy" floor cleaner ads should have stayed away from sex


The Thai ad industry is known for being "out there", so this series by Hakuhodo is not much of a surprise. The idea of a floor so clean, it reflects corruption and nastiness is interesting and kind of fun. 

Above, a politician takes graft. Below, a drug dealer has his gun ready. You can full-size versions at Ads of The World.


This last one, though, is a bad choice. Who wants their brand associated with child prostitution? Especially in a place where sex-trafficking is rampant? The reflection up her skirt is unsettling as well. 


I really wish the campaign had stuck to cartoonish "bad guys". Now I just feel like I need to be cleansed, too...

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Fitness studio offers pole dancing lessons for children

via The Province

Studio owner Kristy Craig, certified fitness and aerobics instructor and member of the Pole Fitness Association, told The Province, “My existing students were asking about it for their children. They were saying, ‘My daughter plays on my pole at home all the time, I’d love her to actually learn how to do things property and not hurt herself.’”

She insists that pole dancing, when treated as a fitness routine, has nothing to do with stripping for money.
“For competitions they actually have rules and regulations that there can be nothing sexual, or any article of clothing removed, and in some you aren’t allowed to wear high heels. The sexuality is being taken out of it. It’s highlighting the gymnastic, athletic and circus acrobatics aspect.”

Plus, if those little girls (and boys) want a future in exotic entertainment, they have a great head start.




Monday, July 30, 2012

Adult performers against child porn

Via Politics Theory Photography

These posters are part of a Belgian campaign, by Grey Brussels, for the not-for-profit Child Focus. As the video below explains (while using excessive amounts of barely-blurred hardcore porn images), the campaign featured European adult performers "Pussykat" and Rocco Siffredi to push a very simple message of saying "no" to sexual images of underage people.



The case study video is the one being bandied around the adblogs, but I far prefer the actual online PSA:



The idea of using people's interest in legal porn to police the internet for illegal stuff is certainly going to get attention, which it did — all the way up to Belgian parliament. But the execution of the posters and video, at least, is very simple, tasteful and effective.

Via Ads of the World

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Strip club industry to Canadians: "We are coming for your daughters!"

Via Wikimedia Commons
The Adult Entertainment Association of Canada recently announced a "six-point action plan" to fight against the federal government's new moratorium on issuing visas or extensions for foreign exotic dancers working in Canada's "ballet" clubs. They plan on organizing the dancers; seeking Canadian husbands to marry those whose visas are expiring; filing refugee claims, and working with civil servants. (What?)

But another point in the plan  is the one that may get the most attention from average Canadians: If they can't bring in foreigners, they will invite your daughters to do the job.

Association director Tim Lambrinos told QMI Agency that recruiters from strip clubs will try to attract students by attending job fairs at high schools, colleges and universities in Toronto and surrounding areas. "We are already doing some outreach work in some areas," he said. "We will be taking a strippers' dance pole with us to the schools."

I have been trying to track down what QMI claims is a draft copy of the flyer that AEAC is planning to woo the teens with, but to no avail. Here's how they describe it:

QMI Agency has obtained a draft copy of the flyer to be circulated to high school students. It advises them that they can earn tuition fees while working as an "exotic dance entertainer" and that no sex with customers is permitted. 
"If you are visually appealing and comfortable with your naked body and are comfortable about taking all your clothes off," the flyer states. "You can be working right now as an exotic dancer and earn your tuition fees for university or college." 
Students are told they must be "comfortable ... onstage at a club and disrobing," and are guaranteed that "no actual sex or sex acts (will) occur." 
It warns them that they will have to provide private dances, or table dances, in dark lounge areas and part-time, full-time or seasonal jobs are available.

While it is unlikely that Mr. Lambrinos and his stripper pole will be attending career day in your child's school anytime soon, this obvious PR move might backfire as it makes people think of how women are treated in the legal sex industry.

Timea Nagy (via CNEWS)
The visa ban is a result of increasing public unease with the spectre of human trafficking. Hungarian immigrant Timea Nagy, at age 19, was tricked into entering a life of stripping and prostitution in Canada. She was abducted and abused before escaping. She later founded the human trafficking rescue organization, Walk With Me. She applauded the visa ban as a way to get women out of the life.

Caroline and Nicola (via Canoe)
On the other side, QMI interviewed two women from Hungary who are currently working in strip clubs, and feel betrayed by the change in their status.  "I am very disappointed and afraid of what may happen to me in the future," said 28-year-old Caroline. Nicola, 25, added "My visa is almost expired and I am very scared. I am very shattered that I may no longer be able to work and help my family back home."

And here's the problem: we created the demand for these performers, and in many cases turned a blind eye to how they got here and what they endure behind closed doors. But once confronted with the problem, we take it out on those same performers by kicking them out of the country. Either way, we as a society are treating foreign women as disposable commodities.

Which leads back to the "we are coming for your daughters" ploy. Ironically, it reminds me of the "Somebody's Daughter" Christian anti-porn campaign from a few years ago. I wonder if it will make people think more about the women onstage and in the champagne rooms as actual people deserving of empathy and respect, not just paid-for boobs and pudenda. But my more cynical side tells me that people will opt for the more convenient route of just sending the foreigners home and forgetting about the whole thing.

Related: Exotic Dancing Industry in Ontario: Health and Safety (pdf)