31 Jan 2007
| by by Darren Davidson
crucial if the ad was to reach the 18- to 24-year-old audience before they left for the pub. The ASA ...
31 Jan 2007
| by by Daniel Farey-Jones
, especially to Christians. The ASA cleared the ad because it decided it was unlikely to cause serious or widespread offence. The ASA noted that The Big Prawn Company had responded by letter to 16 complaints ...
26 Jan 2007
| by by Charlie McCathie
, the Australian version of the ASA, upheld the complaints and ruled that the beer ad was offensive and demeaning ...
24 Jan 2007
| by by Joanne Payne
harmful to health. The ASA did not uphold any of the complaints made against the ad. It ruled ...
, the ASA ruled that, although any reference to child abuse is shocking and often deemed inappropriate, Peta ...
24 Jan 2007
| by Nicola Clark
The £300,000 campaign, running across the London Underground
network and at Network South-East railway stations, quotes panel-sample
figures from internet monitor Hitwise for July to September 2006. The activity, by Clemmow Hornby Inge, is the first specifically
promoting the site. The ASA has received one ...
23 Jan 2007
| by by Staff
A member of the public made the complaint last week, according to the ASA. The month-long campaign, which runs until January 28, bases the claim on figures from Hitwise that say Telegraph.co.uk was visited more times than any other newspaper website between July and September 2006, based on UK visits ...
23 Jan 2007
| by Media Week
of the public made the complaint last week, according to the ASA.
17 Jan 2007
| by by Charlie McCathie
adults with pre-existing knowledge of the drug would identify the white powder as cocaine. The ASA ...
17 Jan 2007
| by by Daniel Farey-Jones
of the size of the burger had been corrected. The ASA was told by the Broadcast Advertising Clearance Centre ...
10 Jan 2007
| by by Joanne Payne
readers would see it as condoning violence. The ASA upheld all complaints relating to the aggressive use ...
that the ads featuring the injured woman condoned self-harm. The ASA noted that the ads appeared in a supplement with an adult readership. Because of this the ASA decided it was unlikely to encourage self ...