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MADONNA has been forced to pay $638,000 after copying ideas from a well-known artist without permission in one of her videos.
Madonna, made the out-of-court settlement after admitting the video for her song Hollywood was inspired by the late French erotic photographer Guy Bourdin.
cheers Clayton!
Note: While The Age in australia reports that the ads are being banned:
Advertisements for junk food will be banned during children's television programs in Britain in an attempt by the Government to reduce obesity in the young.
the Guardian reports that Labor may ban ads - Labour considers ban on junk food ads during children's TV:
Junk food manufacturers could be banned from advertising during children's television programmes under plans being considered for inclusion in Labour's next manifesto.
Finally found out why I haven't seen this ad yet - in the Financial Times
ng the advert altogether. Denmark also has not shown the advert following concerns about a section showing the words Yes and No on a wall, which could conjure unhappy memories of the country's rejection in a referendum on the European Union's Maastricht treaty.
Meanwhile, the French version is missing a section showing a judge making a ruling amid worries about a possible link in viewers' minds between political life and presence in court. In Portugal, there was grumbling about the spelling of Anna in a classroom scene, since the name is Ana in Portuguese. Spain agreed to show the advert, but only if its closing message could also be translated in its four regional languages, at parliament's expense.
Ha! You thought they'd know that about Spain by now aye? Tsssk. Now, the unhappy memories of the Maastricht treaty suprised me while the "Ana" part made sense, just go into post and fix it I say. :)
Complaint:
Objection to an advertisement, in Campaign magazine, for tickets to an advertising awards ceremony. The advertisement showed a photo of an unbuttoned dress shirt with stains on the front and captions describing them. A lipstick stain at the bottom of the shirt was captioned "ZOE. CREATIVE SECRETARY". The complainant objected that the suggestion of oral sex was offensive and demeaned women, especially those who worked in advertising.
"The advertisers said they had not intended to cause offence to women in general or to those in advertising; they said the advertisement was intended to encourage people to attend their awards night." (so they could get their blowjobs?") "The publishers said their audience was sophisticated, professional and limited to those working in the media and advertising." (not any girls then, right?)
apparantly.
LA Times reports (if the free registration bugs you, use BugMeNot) - but here is a large quote so you don't have to:
After a low-level MTV employee asked for changes in an ad for the hit documentary "Super Size Me," the film's distributors tried to parlay the dust-up into a Michael Moore-type publicity blitz....
"Every time [McDonald's] said something to attack the movie
"Little Leaguers deserve to see their heroes slide into bases, not ads," wrote Nethercutt, who is running for U.S. Senate.
"It's gotten beyond grotesque," Nader said. "The fans have to revolt here. Otherwise, they'll be looking at advertisements between advertisements."
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