Showing posts with label instagram. Show all posts
Showing posts with label instagram. Show all posts

Saturday, September 9, 2017

Being banned from Facebook and Instagram sends "honest" bra ad viral


Some ads are made to be "banned." This one, from the Australian division of underwear brand Berlei, pushed the bounds of breast portrayal and was subsequently taken down from the brand's Facebook and Instagram pages for being "offensive."



News.com.au's Angela Mollard writes:
Berlei’s ad is not gratuitous. It’s not sleazy or even sexual. Rather, it’s a fistpump-worthy piece of advertising that addresses women’s body concerns head or, rather, breast on. Yes there’s boobs bouncing under a sports bra and women trying to cover their nipples and prod or poke bits of flesh back into an unsatisfactory garment, but that’s life with breasts.


I'd have to agree, although the ad is certainly provocative in a very deliberate way.

As of this moment (10:30 EDT, Saturday September 9, 2017) the ad has almost 225,000 views on YouTube. Expect to see many more as the earned media does its job.



Are people interested in this ad because it's about breasts? Of course! Is that a problem? Perhaps to some prudish American social media moguls. But it seems pretty feminist to me.

If you have any thoughts on the ad, please feel free to comment. I'll be ramping up this blog again over the next few weeks, so expect to see more posts. Let's talk about ethics in advertising!

Wednesday, August 12, 2015

The FDA treats Kim Kardashian's Instagram selfie as an ad campaign


Here's the text of the post, in full:
OMG. Have you heard about this? As you guys know my #morningsickness hasbeen pretty bad. I tried changing things about my lifestyle, like my diet, butnothing helped, so I talked to my doctor. He prescribed me #Diclegis, and I felt alot better and most importantly, it’s been studied and there was no increased riskto the baby. I’m so excited and happy with my results that I’m partnering withDuchesnay USA to raise awareness about treating morning sickness. If you havemorning sickness, be safe and sure to ask your doctor about the pill with thepregnant woman on it and find out more www.diclegis.com;www.DiclegisImportantSafetyInfo.com. 

It's been no secret that many celebrities' social media endorsements are for sale. Five years ago, I blogged about the brazenness with which their followings are bought and sold as commercial media.

Product placements are rampant on narcissistic selfie feeds with millions of dedicated followers, but somehow the United States government decided that this selfie crossed the line into pharmaceutical advertising.

After Ms. Kardashian posted this blatant endorsement to her 42.6 million followers in July, the US Food and Drug Administration sent a letter to the manufacturer of the anti-morning-sickness medication, demanding immediate elimination of the post:
The Office of Prescription Drug Promotion (OPDP) of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has reviewed the Kim Kardashian Social Media Post (social media post) (2015-0069-01) 1 for DICLEGIS (doxylamine succinate and pyridoxine hydrochloride) delayed-release tablets, for oral use (DICLEGIS) submitted by Duchesnay, Inc. (Duchesnay) under cover of Form FDA 2253. The social media post was also submitted as a complaint to the OPDP Bad Ad Program. The social media post is false or misleading in that it presents efficacy claims for DICLEGIS, but fails to communicate any risk information associated with its use and it omits material facts. Thus, the social media post misbrands DICLEGIS within the meaning of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FD&C Act) and makes its distribution violative. 21 U.S.C. 352(a), (n); 321(n); 331(a). See 21 CFR 202.1(e)(5). These violations areconcerning from a public health perspective because they suggest that DICLEGIS is safer than has been demonstrated.  
... 
OPDP requests that Duchesnay immediately cease misbranding DICLEGIS and/or cease introducing the misbranded drug into interstate commerce. Please submit a written response to this letter on or before August 21, 2015, stating whether you intend to comply with this request, listing all promotional materials (with the 2253 submission date) for DICLEGIS that contain presentations such as those described above, and explaining your plan for discontinuing use of such materials, or, in the alternative, for ceasing distribution of DICLEGIS. Because the violations described above are serious and repeated, we request, further, that your submission include a comprehensive plan of action to disseminate truthful, non-misleading, and complete corrective messages about the issues discussed in this letter to the audience(s) that received the violative promotional materials. In order to clearly identify the violative promotional piece(s) and/or activity and focus on the corrective message(s), OPDP recommends that corrective piece(s) include a description of the violative promotional piece(s) and/or activity, include a summary of the violative message(s), provide information to correct each of the violative message(s), and be free of promotional claims and presentations. To the extent possible, corrective messaging should be distributed using the same media, and generally for the same duration of time and with the same frequency that the violative promotional material was disseminated.
This is serious stuff. By treating the Instagram post as a paid ad, the FDA is bringing the full weight of its authority not on citizen Kim Kardashian, but on the company that they assume paid her to shill for them. As I'm sure you know, pharmaceutical advertising is heavily regulated. One of the most onerous parts of that regulation, for advertisers, is the endless list of risks, contraindications, and possible side effects. The FDA points out specifically that the drug has not been studied in women with hyperemesis gravidarum. Omissions like this can can prove tragic.

Since this time, the Instagram post has been removed. Furthermore, the manufacturer admitted to media that it was a paid endorsement (duh!) but that Ms. Kardashian really does take the drug and it was prescribed by her doctor. The Independent quotes Thomas Abrams, the director of the Office of Prescription Drug Promotion at the FDA, saying that the manufacturer is complying with the warning.

An FDA Q&A page states that the emergence of social media has "complicated the job" of promotional regulation, stating "we generally do not have authority over statements made by independent organizations or persons—what we call third parties—unless they are acting on behalf of a company." They also mention that this isn't the first time they have intervened.

This should be an important wake-up call for certain advertisers using celebrities as "native advertising" channels. As the line between advertising and earned media blurs, the regulators have learned to simply follow the money.




Monday, February 23, 2015

This Disney Princess vibrator isn't just a violation of copyright


As if Disney Princesses weren't already problematic enough, childhood fantasies are sexualized in the name of irony.

From The Daily Dot:
The girly, delicate “Love Discovery Mini Vibrator” looks like your standard $68 sex toy, except that it’s being marketed as the clitoral stimulator of choice of Disney Princesses Ariel and Jasmine, with the caption “Yas gurl all princesses do it.” Nothing says “you should buy this sex toy!” like an endorsement from a mermaid.
Not funny, shopjeen. I doubt Disney's lawyers will be amused either.

Monday, June 3, 2013

@Swiffer channels Rosie the Riveter to sell mops


The original poster, produced in 1943 by J. Howard Miller in 1943 for Westinghouse Electric as morale-booster for women workers, has since become an iconic image for female empowerment.

That is, until 70 years later, when Rosie was hijacked to sell cleaning supplies to women as part of the expectation that they're responsible for housework:


This image, which for the moment I can only find as a partial, was spotted and shared by Instagrammer  Heather Beschizza (@hbeschizza), later picked up by Boing Boing and Buzzfeed.

My favourite comment in the ensuing cascading PR fail is from Dan Savage:


Good luck with the spin, Swiffer.

This isn't the first time Rosie has been sent back to the kitchen:

Via Popular Feminism and Infotainment, May 2011

UPDATE:


Thursday, September 20, 2012

Obamagramming for the youth vote #forall


Considering that social media played such a huge part in inspiring Americans to vote for President Obama in 2008, I was wondering what 2012 would be like. After all, the landscape has changed.

Besides Pres. Obama's stiff, third-person Twitter feed and his AMA on Reddit, I haven't seen much worth remarking on. But then I saw a piece on The Wall about the Team Obama's infiltration of Instagram.

It's a nice little movement, perfectly in tune with the sensibilities of Millennial voters. Called "a vote for all" (which contrasts nicely with Senator Romney's "47%" fiasco), it features Barrack Obama's Instagram account putting out a call to young voters:
Why are you voting for Barack Obama? Share your photo and your reason using #ForAll, then head to vote.barackobama.com. 
If there are three things that define the young generation, it's colleboration, taking pictures of themselves and their surroundings, and telling people what they're up to at all times. Since Instagram  (now owned by Facebook) allows them to do all three, it's a natural fit.

Plus, it has celebrity endorsers.


Besides Natalie Portman  and Ms. Alba, apparently Scarlett Johansson and Jared Leto have also Tweeted their support.

And it looks like it's taking off:


Will this slacktivism turn into higher youth voter turnout, considered crucial for the President's re-election? The fact that this campaign launched so late is actually a good thing, with the short memory and fickle nature of social media. But there are still a few weeks to go.

Update: Republican Texas Governor Rick Perry has already trolled the hashtag.



Man, I love social media politics.