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New Strategy Against Bottled Water: Satire

By Katherine Glover | Jul 29, 2009

Tappening bottled water anti-ad

Tappening bottled water anti-ad

“Bottled water makes acid rain fall on playgrounds,” says a new ad created by Tappening, a New York-based group taking on bottled water for environmental reasons. The disclaimer appears in small letters at the bottom of the ad: “If bottled water companies can lie, we can too.”

Bottled water has been taking a lot of hits lately. Environmentalists have long criticized the unnecessary use of plastic bottles, many of which never wind up recycled, and more recently, both the Environmental Working Group and the Government Accountability Office found that tap water is actually regulated more than water sold in bottles.

The folks at Tappening say that bottled water companies are dishonest with their advertising. “For example, ads for bottles filled with tap water [are] labeled and marketed with water cascading over pristine mountaintops,” the group said in a press release. And many companies don’t even list the source of their water.

So Tappening is countering with its own blatantly dishonest campaign, featuring slogans like “Bottled Water Causes Blindness in Puppies.” Tappening is spending more than half a million dollars on outdoor posters in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Miami and Las Vegas.

Naturally, the International Bottled Water Association isn’t happy with the campaign, and the group’s chief executive called it unfair.

“We certainly would disagree with the premise that bottled water companies lie in their advertising. Like all products, bottled water ads must be truthful and nonmisleading,” he said. Even when beverage companies use municipal water, he said, the water is purified and bottled under sanitary conditions.

At least one bottled water company has faced legal action in the past for stretching the truth in its advertising — Nestle Waters in Canada got in trouble last year for a campaign calling bottled water “the most environmentally responsible consumer product in the world.”

Related Stories on BNET Food:
Bottled Water Faces New Scrutiny
Is Environmentalism Killing Bottled Water, Or is it Just the Economy?

Katherine Glover is a Minneapolis-based print, radio and online journalist. She's written for Salon.com, Sierra Magazine and many others, and she does a weekly blog on immigration issues for MinnPost.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • New Strategy Against Bottled Water: Mockery

    BNET Food - 114 days 10 hours 33 minutes ago

    “Bottled water makes acid rain fall on playgrounds,” says a new ad created by Tappening, a New York-based group taking on bottled water for environmental reasons. The disclaimer appears in small letters at the bottom of the ad: “If bottled water companies can lie, we can too.” Bottled water has been taking a lot of hits

  • Chuck Norris can be killed with bottle water!!!

    Ad Land - 115 days 17 hours 16 minutes ago

    Tappening are at it again, this time they have a campaign called start a lie where you can make up some idiotic "truth" about bottled water and pass it on to your pals. You can even download these posters where acid rain falls on playgrounds, puppies are blinded and restless legs keep you up all night - all because of that bad bad bottled...

  • The Bottled Water Debate Heats Up

    AdPulp - 114 days 12 hours 55 minutes ago

    Outside of political marketing, you rarely see ads where one marketer calls another one a liar. The New York Times reports on one brand that's opposed to bottled water and isn't afraid to say it. Taking a cue from antitobacco campaigns, Tappening, a group opposed to bottled water on environmental grounds, has introduced a campaign called...

  • More "Ads by Google" Across the Web

    WebProNews - 36 days 10 hours 31 minutes ago

    Google has started adding "Ads by Google" to more of its ads around the web. The reasoning for this is that a lot more advertisers are using Google's rich media ad formats these days, and the fact that they come from Google may not seem so obvious all the time."You'll soon notice a small 'i' (for 'information') icon overlay in the bottom...

  • Coca-Cola Japan Introduces Easily-Crushable Bottles

    GreenBiz.com - 165 days 6 hours ago

    Companies around the world have been taking a number of steps to counteract the wastefulness and environmental impacts of bottled water. With its I LOHAS water, Coca-Cola Japan is touting a lightweight bottle that can be crushed easily to take up little space.

 

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