Running Free not pleased with DDB ads, calls them a hoax
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Back in Noverber DDB Canada approached Nick Capra, co-owner of Running Free, a Markham, Ont. athletic apparel store, with an offer to do a pro bono ad campaign – meaning they figured that they had an awesome idea they really wanted to do. The idea was to show what happens when us girls don’t have a decent running bra, portraits of women with black eyes and broken noses and the line “Support bras, now available.â€
Nick Capra didn’t like the ads, but sought the opinions of his co-workers anyway:
“I do things by consensus, so I showed them to everybody at the shop and they all had the same reaction, which was quite negative…They looked like a domestic violence campaign.â€
Capra then told DDB he didn’t want to use them, and that was that, right?
Wrong.
However, according to Andrew Simon, senior vice-president and creative director at DDB’s Toronto office, Capra gave the agency the go-ahead in writing to produce the ads, though Simon declined to show Marketing a copy of Capra’s approval.
But the ads were sent to adblogs and have thus cause quite a stir on the net, so finally Capra has posted a statement on Running Free’s website calling the ads a “hoax,†“tasteless and offensive†and saying he never authorized the use of the company logo. DDB now wants to apologise and are asking all adbloggers to take the ads down.
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