Transcript Chapter 3

Chapter 3
Legal and Ethical Implications
Federal regulation
Federal Communications Commission
• Sponsorship identification … Must
sponsor’s name be mentioned in a
commercial?
• Yes, public must be aware that it’s
listening to an advertisement. Sponsor’s
name must be mentioned at least once.
• Payola and Plugola … What are they?
Payola …Penalty, $10,000 fine and year
in jail … Plugola … announcer “plugs”
product, not mentioning that he has
received payment or some inducement.
• Station-conducted contests … What do
you always hear about contests on the
radio?
• Station must disclose the terms of the
contest (What are they?)
• Political sponsorship
identification …. What do you
always hear at the end of a political
ad?
• Sponsor of a political ad must be
clearly identified … listeners must
know they are listening to a political
ad and understand who paid for the
broadcast time.
• In Radio spots, announcement at
the end … in TV ads, sponsor
information may be presented
visually.
• What is “Equal time”? ….If a station
carries an ad for one candidate, it
must carry ads for others.
• Liquor advertising … Why did liquor
advertising not appear on TV until 1996?
Liquor industry voluntarily refrained from
broadcast advertising … never a law
against it.
• Stations cautious about liquor
advertising, fearing backlash against
beer and wine advertising (cigarette
advertising banned in 1971).
Federal Trade Commission …
protects the public from unfair and
deceptive business practices, including
false and misleading advertising
• Deceptive advertising … What makes
advertising deceptive? Deliberately false
demonstrations or statements … or true
statements that convey a misleading
implication.
Rigged demonstrations … FTC expects
advertisers to show a product as it really is
… not altered for effect.
• FTC tolerates a certain level of
exaggeration … What about the statement:
“Bayer works wonders”? … Such
exaggerations are known as “puffery” –
broad, vague, laudatory language.
• FTC believes everyday consumers are
intelligent enough to recognize puffery and
not take it seriously.
• Volvo fined for misrepresenting the
strength, crashworthiness and structural
integrity of its automobiles … Pickup driving
over a row of automobiles, all crushed
except the Volvo … Volvo was structurally
reinforced, others not.
• Testimonials … must celebrity
endorsers use the product? Yes,
testimonials and endorsements must
be genuine.
• Actors need not actually use a product
… but if you identify a person as “Mrs.
Jones of Omaha,” she must be Mrs.
Jones of Omaha (unless an obvious
spoof).
• Comparative advertising …
comparative ads should not disparage
or unfairly attack competitors.
• Research data ….claims based on
research must not be false or
misleading
• Truth in lending … Why the rushed
reading of legal information at the end of
an ad? Advertiser must fully disclose all
credit terms.
Self-regulation – ethical questions
• Stereotyping – What is it? Shorthand used
for convenience. Help to avoid character
development. Guy in the black hat (bad
guy) … young man with thick glasses
(geek) … burly college athlete (dumb jock).
• Viewers may come to believe stereotypes
are true, or almost always true.
• What are some stereotypes of women?
• What are some ethnic stereotypes?
Complaints about the Taco Bell chihuahua
(“Yo quiero Taco Bell.”) Others liked the
Chihuahua and the character survived.
• Avoid blatant and unflattering stereotypes.
Cable advertising
• Cable is regulated more by
local franchising than FCC.
Not required to observe the
FCC rules for sponsorship
identification and contests.
• But cable must observe FCC
political sponsorship
identification rules.
• FTC may regulate advertising
in all media.