The One Show acts on scam ads with five year ban threat to agencies and creatives

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WWF Tsunami.jpgNot only are scam ads the target of a crack down by the New York One Show but the one-off, media paid but the agency entries will also be targeted. This will have a massive impact on entries from Asia.

Faced with the embarrassing fall out of DDB Brazil’s “Tsunami 9/11” scam ad for the WWF (read here and here) the One Club (who run the One Show) has issued a statement and declared penalties for agencies and creatives involved in scam ad entries. These penalties involve a ban on future entries to One Show for a period of 5 years. But it is the second part of the One Club’s statement that will have a widespread impact on Asia’s metal performance at the awards show.

To be fair, very few entries from Asia run without a client approval of some kind. They are always signed off by a client or, at the very least, the owner of a store that retails that product. However, The One Club statement also targets ads that are created expressly for award show entry and the creators of these entries face 3 year bans.

It is this part of the One Club statement that will be of most interest to agencies in Asia.

An agency or regional office of an agency network that enters an ad that has run once, on late night TV, or has only run because the agency produced a single ad and paid to run it themselves*, will be banned from entering The One Show for 3 years.

* The One Club reserves the right to review ‘late-night, ran-once’ and launch versions, at The One Club’s discretion. If it is determined that the ad was created expressly for award show entry, the penalty will hold.   

Now everyone reading this knows as well as CB Asia does that thisaccounts for around 90% of all print entries from Asia to the One Show.As well as any other international awards show. And, to be fair, thisalso accounts for a large percentage of entries from other parts of theworld like South America, Europe, South Africa, Middle East, Australiaand New Zealand.

You only have to take a very quick look through the Pencil winners from last year’sOne Show to realise the impact this decision will have. Draw a lineright the way through all those karate school entries, the restaurantads, those ice-cream ads, the bookshop ads, those detergent ads withthe product in the bottom right hand corner, the whole public servicecategory. All those ads where you got a friendly photographer andretoucher to donate their time and the agency paid (or negotiated) for the ads to runin bus shelters or in IS and Timeout magazine and the like. Gone. 

And the impact goes further – every Thai or Chinese print awards entry that uses English language for the headline or copy would now be ineligible because these are obviously ads and campaigns that are “tidied up” for entry to awards.

It’scertainly a brave decision for any awards show to make – especially inthis economic environment. It could be argued that the huge publicity that this ad has created over the past two weeks has forced One Show’s hand. But with all award shows already looking ataround 35-40% overall reductions in entries this is bound to furtherreduce entries to One Show. Two prominent ECDs that Campaign Brief Asiaspoke to over the weekend publicly welcomed the One Show decision, butprivately agreed that they believed many networks would probably justdecide to skip all entries to One Show this year to not only avoid anyrisk of public humiliation but, equally, to appease Chief FinancialOfficers who have decimated their budgets for award entries. 

It’s going to be fascinating to watch how this all plays out over the next six months. Belowis the full statement from the One Show. It makes interesting readingand is very comprehensive – the only thing missing is the paragraph onthe horse-whipping of last year’s jury members who actually thoughtthis very average WWF “Tsunami” ad from DDB Brazil was a good ad and awarded it with Merit status!

Inthe light of the recent events surrounding the “Tsunami Ad” created byDDB Brazil for WWF, the One Club announces today that we will implementwhat we believe to be the most stringent and thorough “fake ads” policyin our industry.

The One Club defines “fake ads” as: ads createdfor nonexistent clients or made and run without a client’s approval, orads created expressly for award shows that are run once to meet therequirements of a tear sheet.

For 2010 and onwards, the One Show will be adopting the following new rules and penalties.

1.An agency or regional office of an agency network that enters an admade for nonexistent clients, or made and run without a client’sapproval, will be banned from entering the One Show for 5 years.

2. The entire team credited on the “fake” entries will be banned from entering the One Show for 5 years.

3.An agency or regional office of an agency network that enters an adthat has run once, on late night TV, or has only run because the agencyproduced a single ad and paid to run it themselves*, will be bannedfrom entering The One Show for 3 years.

* The One Clubreserves the right to review ‘late-night, ran-once’ and launchversions, at The One Club’s discretion. If it is determined that the adwas created expressly for award show entry, the penalty will hold.

TheOne Club exists to champion excellence in advertising and design in allits forms. We will stringently enforce these rules and penalties toensure that The One Show remains the pinnacle of advertising and designcreated for marketers and brands.

The One Show encouragesother international award shows to follow suit with similar policies.In addition, we are in the process of developing an initiative in theagency, client, and creative communities, in which individuals andagencies will be called upon to monitor and eliminate “fake” ads attheir source. A detailed guidelines will appear in the 2010 One ShowCall for Entry.”