Outrage After Pringles Ads Are Placed Before YouTube Fitness Class

Outrage After Pringles Ads Are Placed Before YouTube Fitness Class

Kellogg’s – the owner of Pringles – has pulled all advertising from the PE With Joe YouTube channel, after being accused of advertising to children.

PE With Joe has grown hugely popular during the lockdown period, as people look for ways to exercise from home.

The popularity has meant the workout, which were originally targeted at adults, have been extended to children.

Kellogg’s had placed pre-programme ads for Pringles in the videos.

And with this brings certain legal concerns in the UK, where the advertising watchdog does not allow food and drink bands to promote “less healthy” products on children’s TV, or any media channel, with an audience of more than 25 per cent under-16s.

It is part of the Government’s childhood obesity plan measures.

However, there are certain loopholes which allow brands to advertise such products on digital platforms like YouTube.

And while this means the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) will not pursue formal charges against Kellogg’s, the company is still under fire from advocate groups.

A Children’s Food Campaign spokeswoman told The Guardian: “A pop, skip and a jump is a misleading and counterproductive message for industry to be pushing. Placing this ad directly before Joe’s hugely popular children’s daily PE class is a total betrayal of his work, and highly insensitive, irresponsible marketing. Children don’t need more salt, more saturated fat, more sugar, more excess calories being pushed to them during a pandemic, or indeed at any time.

“Children are even more of a captive audience during this lockdown, and we are hugely concerned they are still being subjected to unhealthy food advertising like this. The food industry and government focus should be on building up people’s health and resilience, not undermining it.”

Kellogg’s has responded to the criticism, confirming it removed the ads as soon as it was notified children were now being targeted by the fitness channel.

“It was not our intention to advertise Pringles to a younger audience. We are careful about where we place our advertising as we know we have a responsibility to act in the right way,” the company said in a statement.

“Joe’s fitness channel has historically been aimed at adults which was the case when we placed our advert on it (booked on 18 March). His audience shifted recently with the launch of ‘PE With Joe’.

“As soon as we were made aware that the audience of his channel had changed, we took steps to remove our advertising and we have put measures in place to prevent a repeat.’’

 




Please login with linkedin to comment

Online Advertising Pringles

Latest News

Cosmo Returns To Australia!
  • Media

Cosmo Returns To Australia!

Ever get the feeling we've weirdly warped back to 1988 at the moment? Confirm it with the relaunch of Cosmo in print.

Sydney Comedy Festival: Taking The City & Social Media By Storm
  • Media

Sydney Comedy Festival: Taking The City & Social Media By Storm

Sydney Comedy Festival 2024 is live and ready to rumble, showing the best of international and homegrown talent at a host of venues around town. As usual, it’s hot on the heels of its big sister, the giant that is the Melbourne International Comedy Festival, picking up some acts as they continue on their own […]

Global Marketers Descend For AANA’s RESET For Growth
  • Advertising

Global Marketers Descend For AANA’s RESET For Growth

The Australian Association of National Advertisers (AANA) has announced the final epic lineup of local and global marketing powerhouses for RESET for Growth 2024. Lead image: Josh Faulks, chief executive officer, AANA  Back in 2000, a woman with no business experience opened her first juice bar in Adelaide. The idea was brilliantly simple: make healthy […]