Sex has been employed in the advertising industry since it began. At the beginning, wood carvings and illustrations of attractive women (often unclothed from the waist up) adorned posters, signs, and ads for saloons, tonics, and tobacco. In the modern era, a less stylised and often more direct implementation of the female form or the beefcake is being deployed in ads to grab our attention.
In 1994, Wonderbra created a neck turning; car-smashing ad entitled Hello Boys using the super model Eva Herzigová. The famous poster was featured in an exhibition at the Victorian and Albert Museum in London and was voted in at number 10 in a”Poster of the Century” contest.

Voted Top 10 Best Billboard of all Time
In 2003, Easyjet created what it called a “non offensive, topical, humorous and irreverent” poster campaign that parodied the Wonderbra campaign of the 1990’s. Using the strap line “Discover Weapons of Mass Distraction” the campaign paralleled the media hype around the discovery of WMDs in Iraq around the same time. This ad received 186 complaints to the Advertising Standards Authority.

Humorous and relevent at time of publishing
Fast forward to September 2009… The Northern Irish market has at least 5 active second-hand-car sale syndication websites that I know of, including Autotrader.co.uk, usedcarsni.com, nicarfinder.co.uk, utvdrive.co.uk, ulstertrader.co.uk. These sites take dealers’ and private individuals’ cars and promote them either exclusively on the web or in print. They don’t get involved in the car sales transaction itself. In other words they are a car marketing company.
Because the cost of entry to this market is relatively low, it has created massive competition for the advertising spend of the car showrooms and individuals wishing to sell their car. This in turn forces the website to try and increase its notoriety and traffic in order to capture the advertiser’s budget.
The result being that in a desperate attempt to grab attention, one of the local car marketing sites, Ulster Trader, has taken the original Wonderbra campaign and removed all intelligence, fun and intrigue from the original poster. The result being a sexist schoolboy shocker of an ad campaign.

Shockingly Sexist and Unintelligent Advertising
There is a very thin line between sexy and sexually offensive and this campaign has crossed way beyond that thin line. There is no doubt that the campaign will win some short term discussion but the question Ulster Trader must ask is what harm this school boy gutter humor has caused to their brand and it’s long term prospect of survival.
I tried to call them to ask them about whom they felt this campaign connected with, and whom they felt it might alienate. I wanted to know more about the agency behind the campaign and if the campaign is succeeding in building a trusted loyal following. Alas there is no number on their website and the number listed in Yell.com is dead.


I am with you on this. It just made me think how far NI still has to go that this ad made it through concept stage, approval, print and on to a bill board.
I saw this last Saturday in Belfast. I couldn’t believe how bad it was. It will be remembered for all the wrong reasons.
If the owner of the site thinks all this publicity is great, they’re wrong. The website is unremarkable. It’s not doing anything that is already on the market. What a waste of money.
You think those are bad? Wait until you see their other campaigns “Rear ended? Find yourself a new model” and “Undercarriage wrecked? Upgrade your chassis.”
you might like to know that this advertisement is now under investigation by the advertising standards authority. if anyone wants to make a complaint about it, which might help in the campaign to get rid of this offensive advertisement, but also to prevent companies using sexism in their adverts in future, you can do so here:
http://www.asa.org.uk/asa/how_to_complain/complaints_form/
I totally agree with you with you, a shocking ad. I think the line has been well and truly crossed.
I’ve written 3 replies to this so far and deleted them all because my personal views get in the way…to the point, I think everyone takes stuff like this way to seriously, if you dislike the advertisement then boycott their product. But to be fair, that company has done what it set out to do, get their name known, and although it’s received some bad publicity, I’m sure there are plenty of people (mainly blokes, like myself) who had a laugh at the ad and the company stuck in their minds. That in turn, the whole advert is generally aimed at blokes, because of the ‘car’ factor…yes, it may be seen as ‘sexism’, but it’s truthful to say that men have a greater interest (in general) than women in the car market. To finish on a low note, you don’t see guys PMSing when blokes are used in advertising! It makes guys like me look inferior
It appears that the ad has now been banned.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2009/oct/07/asa-used-car-website-ad-banned