Falklands Olympic Advert Condemned By Young And Rubicam, Ad Agency That Created It

PA/Huffington Post UK  |  Posted: 04/05/2012 17:11 Updated: 04/05/2012 17:17

Argentine Advert
The ad has caused huge controversy and accusations of disrespect

An Argentine television advert that sparked controversy by showing an Olympic hopeful training on a Falklands war memorial has been condemned by the ad agency that created it.

Young and Rubicom, who boasts the slogan "Resist the Unusual", are owned by the WPP group, whose chief executive, Sir Martin Sorrell, told The Telegraph the advert was "unacceptable and appalling".

The London arm of Young and Rubicom said in a statement: "It has come to our attention that our agency in Argentina created an ad for the Argentine government that has deeply offended many people in the UK and around the world.

"We strongly condemn this work and have asked the Argentine government to pull the spot."

In reference to the adverts location, a Falklands war memorial in Port Stanley, they said: "While we don't believe it was ever the ad's creators to desecrate a war memorial, they behave in a manner that is unacceptable to our company.

"We are deeply regretful for the pain and suffering this ad has caused and apologise to the many who have been rightly disturbed by it, as we have."

The ad has been causing a diplomatic storm with British foreign secretary William Hague slamming the ad as a "stunt".

FOLLOW UK

An Argentine television advert that sparked controversy by showing an Olympic hopeful training on a Falklands war memorial has been condemned by the ad agency that created it. Young and Rubicom, wh...
An Argentine television advert that sparked controversy by showing an Olympic hopeful training on a Falklands war memorial has been condemned by the ad agency that created it. Young and Rubicom, wh...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 9
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Post Comment Preview Comment
To reply to a Comment: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to.
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
04:58 PM on 05/05/2012
So the brits created the ad FOR Argentina... The CEO is a "Sir". NICE.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AtlanticEastWest
"We have met the enemy and he is us."
07:24 AM on 05/05/2012
Nothing new, Argentineans still want the Falklands and Advertising agencies will do anything for money while apologising for it at the same time.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
01:42 AM on 05/05/2012
"..."We are deeply regretful for the pain and suffering this ad has caused and apologise to the many who have been rightly disturbed by it, as we have."..."

Just as well, considering how much advertising revenue you'd lose otherwise.
11:01 PM on 05/04/2012
Last time the Argies were in Port Stanley - they were running then too - no change really!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DaveJohnWard
08:40 PM on 05/04/2012
That should guarantee him a warm welcome when he gets over here.
08:02 PM on 05/04/2012
Politicising the Olympics with a cheap sick stunt says a great deal about Argentina. Then again these people don't seem to understand the meaning of the word fair. With this in mind we should shoot this athlete accidentally with the starting pistol at the beginning of the race.
02:31 AM on 05/11/2012
"With this in mind we should shoot this athlete accidentally with the starting pistol at the beginning of the race"
And calling for an athlete's murder says a great deal about Britons

Listen, 30 years ago, Argentines were attacking Britain with Exocets, now they're using creativity and adverts. I'd call that progress, don't you agree?

P.S.: and killing him with the starting pistol might be a bit harder than you think, given that he's a hockey player :D
09:52 PM on 05/13/2012
Yes progress indeed :) Just to be clear I wasn't calling for his death just an unfair advantage maybe a leg wound. Killing your opponents when trying to win an argument outside of war is very poor form. 
07:30 PM on 05/04/2012
Do you think there might me a problem with some of the Argentinean athletes visas?