RE: GT86: banned!

Thursday 15th November 2012

GT86: banned!

No, not the car but you can't see the advert any more



The rules governing the way cars are advertised on TV are incredibly strict, with any hint that you might derive some sort of excitement or enjoyment from driving fiercely controlled.

Ironic, in that case, that Toyota's advert for the GT86 portraying a dude sticking it to The Man, breaking out of his dull, over regulated and artificial existence and into the real world of winding roads and fast cars has been ... banned by The Man.

Portrayed, in this instance, by the Advertising Standards Authority who responded to a flood of complaints from people claiming the ad was "irresponsible and condoned dangerous driving." We say a flood. It was actually just two. Nonetheless, the ASA upheld the complaints and scolded Toyota, telling it "not to portray speed or driving behaviour in a way that might encourage motorists to drive irresponsibly in future." If you want to feel really depressed about the (nanny) state of the world you can read the full adjudication here.

Which raises an interesting question. Just how do you advertise a performance vehicle, given the guidelines that dictate how you portray and promote cars? Probably not by hiring Mr Harris for starters.

Think about it though. The rules say you can't refer to speeds over 70mph or "demonstrate power, acceleration, handling characteristics etc except in a clear context of safety. Any references to such characteristics must not imply excitement or competitiveness." And if that wasn't strict enough "there must be no suggestion that a vehicle is to be preferred because of its power or speed. Words like 'performance' can be ambiguous and care should be taken to make the meaning clear."

OK, so you portray the car's race equivalent and tap into the age old 'race on Sunday, sell on Monday' philosophy. Not so fast, buster. "There should be no emotive references to the power of a rally car which shares the model name of a road car. Vehicles should normally be in racing livery and there must be no suggestion that standard production vehicles might be driven in a competitive way or are particularly suitable for fast driving. There should be no suggestion that competitive sport has been used in the development of increased power, speed etc in road cars (eg 'race-bred engines') but references to other improvements, such as reliability, in that context are harmless."

Might we here have one of the reasons touring car racing and rallying are a shadow of their former selves? Think on to yesterday's Time For Tea? video with all those sideways Subarus and the number of blue Imprezas with gold wheels sold to the likes of us off the back of it. If manufacturers can't trade on that why bother pumping millions into motorsport at all?

It might go some way to explaining 'the new driving' Chris was railing against in his much discussed blog yesterday too. After all, if the marketing guys aren't allowed to sell driving as fun or exciting what hope do the engineers have of making it so, even if they were allowed to.

And, in that context, the script to the Toyota ad takes on added poignancy.

 

 

Author
Discussion

davidsc

Original Poster:

325 posts

152 months

Thursday 15th November 2012
quotequote all
Knew that would happen eventually, was a breath of fresh air to car adverts whilst it lasted and totally relevant for the type of car.

wab172uk

2,005 posts

227 months

Thursday 15th November 2012
quotequote all
And rightly so too. Cars are not for having fun in. They are for getting from A to B in complete safety, and under the legal speed limits !!!

My Arse.

I just hope Toyota produce another advert taking the p1ss out of the stupid people who obviously complained.

We should all live in a boring world.

don logan

3,520 posts

222 months

Thursday 15th November 2012
quotequote all
I absolutely KNEW this was coming, there are a few frames of the car looking ever so slightly slidey and I KNEW that would cause a stink!


davidcharles

400 posts

194 months

Thursday 15th November 2012
quotequote all
the 2 people that complained should be shot

RevolveR

227 posts

140 months

Thursday 15th November 2012
quotequote all
Could you make an advert where a car just does a burnout of the tyres without actually moving anywhere at speed?

J98

128 posts

147 months

Thursday 15th November 2012
quotequote all
Seriously, who spends the time of day thinking about whether a car in an advert appears to be breaking the speed limit/not being driven sensibly.
Do people not have better things to be doing with their time?

bigandclever

13,787 posts

238 months

BertBert

19,039 posts

211 months

Thursday 15th November 2012
quotequote all
wasn't all the "ragging" animated in the style of a computer game?

Funk

26,274 posts

209 months

Thursday 15th November 2012
quotequote all
I think it's utterly wrong that the opinion of two (clearly pathetic) people can sweep aside an ad campaign so easily.

DannyScene

6,625 posts

155 months

Thursday 15th November 2012
quotequote all
Absolutely pathetic frankly

flyingscot68

241 posts

139 months

Thursday 15th November 2012
quotequote all
How the hell can two people complaining end up with this result?

What a sad tt of a country we live in......

Baldy881

1,333 posts

177 months

Thursday 15th November 2012
quotequote all
"Which raises an interesting question. Just how do you advertise a performance vehicle"

It's not that interesting, surely your average punter has some kind of idea whether they're getting the 'school run' or 'road legal track day' version of a car without the need for TV ads to tell them so!! rolleyes

Edited by Baldy881 on Thursday 15th November 12:48

Killboy

7,295 posts

202 months

Thursday 15th November 2012
quotequote all
That is shocking. Imagine the ASA on these ads:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QOfrwDp4oUk

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=olHCjLKnUVQ

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nwfaa-Jxnso

Although at least the car is in rally trim, but I'd be guessing there would be more than 2 complaints.

Anubis

1,029 posts

179 months

Thursday 15th November 2012
quotequote all
Make a second advert using a computer game playing the car with power slides, etc. Then at the end show the real car with a decent slogan - something like "imagine no more..."

No rules will be broken and it'll be cool. smile

ScoobieWRX

4,863 posts

226 months

Thursday 15th November 2012
quotequote all
In which case the car chases in the new Sweeney movie should be banned too, and car progs like TG or FG be banned for promoting speed in any way shape or form.

God forbid anyone driving a Focus ST or Jag XFR should ever want to gun it!! rolleyes

P-Jay

10,565 posts

191 months

Thursday 15th November 2012
quotequote all
aholes - TWO people TWO! Complain and that's it - it's gone, never to be seen on TV again and Toyota arwe out of pocket, what? a few Mil?

Can you complain about the complainers?

Braintax

321 posts

187 months

Thursday 15th November 2012
quotequote all
What a pathetic decision. Oh well, any press is good press, and with sites like this one featuring the ad it's only going to get more exposure to the target audience.

Funk

26,274 posts

209 months

Thursday 15th November 2012
quotequote all
Actually, much as the Apple/Samsung case has had a massively beneficial effect on Samsung's sales (quite the opposite of what Apple intended, I'm sure), I hope that this has the opposite of the intended effect for Toyota and generates them loads of publicity for the car.

Mr Whippy

29,033 posts

241 months

Thursday 15th November 2012
quotequote all
Exactly.

Just a little clause at the end. This was all done in a computer game, real driving like this is not encouraged, yadda ya.

They stick that on all the other computer games/animations of cars being ragged around/raced.


It's funny how even in 'digital land' where everything is controlled/synthetic and crap, the nanny state has interfered haha.


It'll all change soon I think. Consider that TWO whole people complained yet a whole department exists to put the stop on that advert? Is that really good value for money? I don't think it is.

Yes if thousands complained it warrants investment, but two?

I can't help but think my money is being pissed up the wall by these government offices when they take on such pointless cases.

Dave

famfarrow

680 posts

154 months

Thursday 15th November 2012
quotequote all
How pathetic, who the hell phones up over such matters!? As for all those rules, burn them and forbid any such stupidity ever again. Liberal country my arse.