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Old January 24th 05, 10:50 AM
Jim Douglas
 
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Holy ****, that can't really be made by VW! No frigging way! I love it,
although not very PC.

"Freddie M" wrote in message
groups.com...

The ORIGINAL ad may be seen / downloaded here....
http://www.boreme.com/bm/JAN05/a/vw-...-bomber/fr.htm

---- cut ---- boom ---- etc ----



"Harry Lime" harrylime (at) harrylime (dot) teevee wrote in message
...


http://observer.guardian.co.uk/uk_ne...396579,00.html

Courtesy of www.harrylime.biz

The spoof ad opens with the suicide bomber leaving his home and jumping

into
his VW Polo. The bomber parks at a busy London restaurant where carefree
diners crowd the pavement. Cut to the terrorist sitting in his car as he
pushes the button to detonate his bomb. The blast is contained within

the
car, saving the diners. The ad ends: 'Polo. Small but tough'.
It has to be a candidate for the sickest advert of all time, but also

one
of
the most deceptive. Despite the high quality production values, real
Volkswagen logo and the free publicity it is attracting around the

world,
the commercial was not made by the car giant.

Indeed, the firm has expressed disgust at the spoof depiction of a

suicide
bomber blowing himself up in a VW Polo, and tomorrow it will consider

legal
action against its creators.

The advert was not made for TV but to be flashed around the world on the
internet. It is part of a phenomenon of 'viral emails' - not to be

confused
with computer viruses - that is so popular that this month saw the first
'viral awards'.

Most are official efforts by companies and advertising agencies. The VW
hoax, however, marks a worrying new trend for them - bogus ads which can

be
made by one individual that can wreck a firm's reputation.

Ford had to distance itself last year from a viral email showing a cat's
head being cut off by a car's sunroof. Paul Buckett, a VW spokesman,

said:
'Two creatives known to our advertising agency, DDB London, sent in this
work on spec. The agency wouldn't have anything to do it. I can only

assume
the people who made it put it on the web.

'We were horrified. This is not something we would consider using: it is

in
incredibly bad taste to depict suicide bombers.

'It gives the impression we've condoned or supported it, and is

potentially
very damaging to Volkswagen. Our legal department is planning an action

and
we will decide tomorrow.'

The ad is believed to be the work of a duo experienced in spoof ads,

known
as Lee and Dan, who also make real commercials.

Dan told the digital newsletter of media experts Brand Republic: 'The ad

got
out accidentally and spread like wildfire.'

It reflected 'what people see in the news every day. The car is the hero
that protects innocent people from someone with very bad intentions.

We're
sorry if it has caused any offence.'


--
I do not find in our particular superstition of Christianity one

redeeming
feature.....Millions of innocent men, women and children, since the
introduction of Christianity, have been burned, tortured, fined and
imprisoned. What has been the effect of this coercion? To make half the
world fools and half hypocrites; to support roguery and error all over

the
world. Thomas Jefferson