Nissan and Ad agency cited by FTC for truck commercial

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RocZX

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Nissan North America and its advertising agency, TBWA Worldwide, have reached a settlement with the Federal Trade Commission over claims that a TV commercial for the Nissan Frontier misled consumers about the pickup truck's hill-climbing prowess.

The 30-second advertisement, "Hill Climb," showed a Frontier pushing a stranded dune buggy up a steep sand dune -- something the truck could not actually do.

Both the truck and dune buggy were actually towed up the hill using cables, the FTC said in announcing today's settlement, which prohibits Nissan and TBWA from using potentially misleading demonstrations in future advertisements for pickups.

"Special effects in ads can be entertaining, but advertisers can't use them to misrepresent what a product can do," Jessica Rich, the director of the FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection, said in a statement. "This ad made the Nissan Frontier appear capable of doing something it can't do."

The advertisement did contain a disclaimer in small print: "Fictionalization. Do not attempt." But that was not enough to satisfy the FTC.

The agency noted that the video was filmed in a way that made it seem as if it had been shot on a camera phone, adding to the realistic nature of the commercial.

Nissan and TBWA will not pay any fines under the settlement. In near-identical statements, the two companies said they have no intention of misleading customers.

"Nissan takes its commitment to fair and truthful advertising seriously," Nissan spokesman Travis Parman wrote in an e-mail. "The company has been and remains committed to complying with the law."
Automobile News


I understand that the FTC doesn't want companies to lie about what their products can do, but this is just stupid.
Car companies have been doing this for ever, they have been faking what their cars are capable of doing.
Why not cite all car companies that have done it and are doing it?
 
I also saw Ford Fusion driving off a cliff & flying. I thought they were joking, not faking? I do remember that Nissan commercial, and honestly, I thought it was a CG.
 
I was under the impression you could show the car doing anything in the advertisement as long as you wrote about how it was fake in the white lettering. Did Nissan think they could fool some people or did they just neglect to do this?
 
I was under the impression you could show the car doing anything in the advertisement as long as you wrote about how it was fake in the white lettering. Did Nissan think they could fool some people or did they just neglect to do this?
"Professional driver, do not attempt" would've been my kind of humor, but probably wouldn't have been very professional. :lol:
 
I also saw Ford Fusion driving off a cliff & flying. I thought they were joking, not faking? I do remember that Nissan commercial, and honestly, I thought it was a CG.
Nissan never said anything about the truck being able to climb a sand hill, if they talked about some advanced 4wd system that the truck had and then showed climbing the hill then it would be like they were trying to fake something. But it does just seem as a joke.


I was under the impression you could show the car doing anything in the advertisement as long as you wrote about how it was fake in the white lettering. Did Nissan think they could fool some people or did they just neglect to do this?
But they did....

From the article in the OP-
The advertisement did contain a disclaimer in small print: "Fictionalization. Do not attempt." But that was not enough to satisfy the FTC.
 
They sure don't make them like they used to...... When they do, FTC come down on you & stuff. :lol:
 
So. Wait you're trying to tell me that all them Fiat's didn't "Swim" to us in the USA :(

If you read the fine print in the Fiat ads, you will see that their disclaimer is that the Fiat 500's traveled most of the way across the ocean via freighter, and it was only the last quarter-mile that they "swam" because Fiat's are only good in water up to 10 meters deep.:D

In jest,
GTsail
 
If you read the fine print in the Fiat ads, you will see that their disclaimer is that the Fiat 500's traveled most of the way across the ocean via freighter, and it was only the last quarter-mile that they "swam" because Fiat's are only good in water up to 10 meters deep.:D
Classic. :lol:👍
 
I'm glad they're finally getting called out on stupid ads like that. Fake ads are the most annoying.

Does anyone here remember the other ad showing a Frontier pulling onto a runway and a plane lands with its broken landing gear resting in the bed of the Frontier?

EDIT: Here you go.


The number of results with titles sounding like its real hurts my head. Did people actually think this was real or are they trying to mislead more people on purpose?
 
I do remember that, and I was also very annoyed by it. :crazy: I find the FTC coming down on Nissan is ridiculous, especially after hearing about the disclaimers, but honestly, both of these commercials looked dumb.
 
I'm Mr Ad-man. These kinds of bannings are daily occurrences.
 
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