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  • 25
    Apr
    2013
    1:49pm, EDT

    Car maker Hyundai apologizes for commercial showing attempted suicide

    A still frame of the Hyundai advertisement, for which the car maker has apologized.

    By Alastair Jamieson, Staff writer, NBC News

    South Korean car maker Hyundai apologized Thursday for a U.K. advertisement that depicts a man trying to commit suicide in his garage but failing because of his zero-emission car.

    The ad, apparently designed for circulation on the Internet, was created by advertising agency Innocean and came to attention when it was featured in a review in the media section of The Guardian newspaper.

    It shows an actor playing a man, intent on ending his life, starting his car in a closed garage – a common method of suicide in which death is caused by carbon monoxide poisoning from exhaust fumes.

    The next scene shows the man opening the garage door followed by the tagline: "The new iX35 with 100% water emissions."

    The company said it had withdrawn the commercial, although clips of it were still available on YouTube [readers may find the video disturbing].

    Ian Tonkin, a UK public relations manager with the Hyundai – the world’s fifth-largest car maker – issued a statement that said: "Hyundai understands that the video has caused offence. We apologize unreservedly. The video has been taken down and will not be used in any of our advertising or marketing."

    A woman who answered the telephone at Innocean's U.K. office said the company did not have any comment to make.

    Holly Brockwell, an advertising industry worker whose father took his life when she was young, posted an emotional open letter to Hyundai and Innocean on her blog, Copyblot.

    "As an advertising creative, I would like to congratulate you on achieving the visceral reaction we all hope for. On prompting me to share it on my Twitter page and my blog. I would not like to congratulate you on making me cry for my dad.

    My dad never drove a Hyundai. Thanks to you, neither will I."

    The evidence shows that this vile Hyundai suicide advert can put lives at risk. bit.ly/11UifVt

    — ben goldacre (@bengoldacre) April 25, 2013

    Science journalist Ben Goldacre described the advertisement as “almost surreally misguided.”

    It was not immediately clear how widely the ad, which has the title “Pipe Job," was ever circulated by Hyundai.

     

    131 comments

    freedom of expression? or common sense should prevail! I will go with 'common sense'. Sometimes people just use 'freedom of expression' to show what a jackass (or a pig?) they are. Sure you have that freedom; we also have the freedom to laugh or even the freedom to refuse to socialize with you.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: media, world, car, suicide, internet, marketing, hyundai, emissions, commercial, featured
  • 30
    May
    2012
    3:51pm, EDT

    Report: Iran using passenger jets to smuggle weapons to Syria, Lebanon

    By msnbc.com staff

    Iran’s government has repeatedly used commercial aircraft to smuggle weapons and explosives to Syria and Lebanon, the German broadcaster ZDF reported Wednesday.


    Follow Open Channel on Twitter and Facebook.


    ZDF, citing Western security sources and unspecified information it said it had obtained, reported that  Iran Air and Yas Air, both based in Iran, have repeatedly used aircraft designated as passenger planes to transport weapons to Damascus and Beirut.  It was not clear from the report what type of weaponry was involved.

    ZDF, a content partner of NBC News, said the weapons were supposedly ordered by Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, which supports the regime of Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad and the terrorist group Hezbollah in Lebanon.

    U.S. officials have long accused Tehran of using commercial aircraft to smuggle weapons to Hezbollah. 

    ZDF noted that there had been one previous shipment of arms seized aboard an Iranian airliner. In March 2011, it said, Turkish security officials in Diyabarkier found weapons and explosives on board a Yas Air passenger jet. The freight was supposedly scheduled to be shipped to Damascus.

    Click here to read an English translation of the ZDF article.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    • US expels Syria diplomat after UN finds Houla victims were 'executed'
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    • Teenager allegedly held as slave in Bosnia for years
    • Britain's PM eats humble pie over snack tax
    • At least 16 killed in 5.8-magnitude earthquake in Italy
    • Brother of doctor who worked with CIA in bin Laden hunt seeks US protection

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    222 comments

    Iran Air And the big surprise is....?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: jets, iran, passenger, arms, weapons, aircraft, commercial, smuggle

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