Censorpedia: An Interactive Database of Censorship Incidents

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Featured Case: Democracy in America (exhibition)


A24041 ELVIS ANGELS FRANCIS AXE 300x222 p4p.jpg

Artist: Unilever

Year: 2011

Date of Action: October 14, 2011

Region: Africa

Location: South Africa

Subject: Religion

Medium: Commercial Advertising

Confronting Bodies: South Africa's Advertising Standards Authority (ASA)

Description of Artwork: Unilever's television advertisement for the "Excite" scent of Axe (known as Lynx in the UK and Australia) deodorant featured attractive female angels crashing down from the sky into an Italian town because they are attracted to an average looking man wearing the deodorant. They lasciviously watch the man while sniffing the air. One by one, the angels smash their halos and advance towards him. At the end of the commercial, a voice-over says, "Excite, the new fragrance from Axe. Even angels will fall."

The Incident: A viewer complained to South Africa's Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) that the suggestion of God's messengers literally falling for a mortal being because of a deodorant was incompatible with his belief as a Christian.

Results of Incident: The ASA agreed with the complaint, and ordered Unilver to withdraw the advertisement and issued the following statement; "The problem is not so much that angels are used in the commercial, but rather that the angels are seen to forfeit, or perhaps forego their heavenly status for mortal desires. This is something that would likely offend Christians in the same manner as it offended the complainant." The advertisement was not televised in South Africa.

Source:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/southafrica/8850294/Deodorant-commercial-banned-for-offending-Christian.html



image source: http://amg133.blogspot.com/2011/10/will-i-see-angel-again.html

youtube link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WRnBHHcdHJQ





























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Censorpedia is a crowdsourced online database of censorship cases within the arts and in culture. It is aimed at those researching censorship, at activists working for freedom of expression and at artists and other cultural producers whose expression has been subject to censorship or attempted censorship.

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