Source: Huffington Post
By: Jessica Misener
Marc Jacobs perfume ads sometime tiptoe into the racy category, but they’re usually the ones starring the designer himself. Now, a new ad for Jacobs fragrance Oh Lola! starring Twilight actress Dakota Fanning, has been pulled from the British markets after consumers complained that it was sexualizing a child, reports Telegraph.
The British Advertising Standards Authority has cracked down on the ad, which features a 17-year-old Fanning with an over-sized bottle of the fragrance between her legs, after receiving complaints that the company was turning Fanning, a minor, into a sex object.
Their statement reads:
“We noted that the model was holding up the perfume bottle which rested in her lap between her legs and we considered that its position was sexually provocative. We understood the model was 17 years old but we considered she looked under the age of 16. We considered that the length of her dress, her leg and position of the perfume bottle drew attention to her sexuality. Because of that, along with her appearance, we considered the ad could be seen to sexualize a child.”
The Guardian reports that Coty, who makes the fragrance, doesn’t have the same problems with the ads, because most readers of the magazines featuring the ads are 25 or older, and that the picture was similar to many other edgy images in those magazines. They also stated that the ad doesn’t show any private body parts or sexual activity,” and defended the ad as provoking, but not indecent.
It’s not like these ads are brand new; as we reported, they hit the Internet this June and officially debuted in August. But the ASA has been on an ad-banning spree lately: they pulled a now-infamous commercial for Axe deodorant after complaints from Christians about the ad’s sexed up fallen angels. In February of this year, another perfume ad got the can, this time a spot for YSL’s Opium fragrance that allegedly promoted drug use.
Dakota’s younger sister Elle, 13, has also posed in fashion campaigns for Marc Jacobs, albeit a bit more buttoned up