Editor's Picks + Features

800px-Habitat67July2010

Montreal’s Best Architecture Psychoanalyzed

Special contributor Justin Boulanger, architecture...

4814694220_7da9ea9331

World Wide Wednesday: Maps, Trains, Trikes and Three Million on the A40

Each week we will be focusing on blogs from around...

1389468625_e47df0f3d7

La construction de la nouvelle Plaza Swatow : une histoire de 2007 à 2010

Septembre 2007 Mai 2008 Mars 2009 Mai 2009 Décembre...

4535824501_36bd0676c6

To renew or not to renew

Je ne sais pas quoi faire. Renouveler ou ne pas renouveler...

4813590841_9f648eb1cb

Photo du jour : Riverview

Riverview Avenue, in Westmount, located just north...

4877446872_8c6c346101

The death of a climbing tree

I came home from a weekend of camping to learn that...

Making the ad creeps pay

In an interesting case from the Pacific Northwest, the city of Portland, Oregon, is suing employment-classifieds site Jobdango for the almost $5500 it cost to remove hundreds of illegal chalk advertisements the company placed on sidewalks last fall. The suit was filed by the city after waiting ten months for the company to pay the fines they were issued.

sidewalk ad creep by rogersThe September Jobdango ad campaign was essentially a big old middle finger to the city of Portland, which issued a warning to the company for the exact same infraction just two years ago.

Each two-feet-by-four-feet ad took ten minutes to be scrubbed from the sidewalk.

This case calls to mind the 2006 case in which the city of Washington DC fined Verizon $150 each for spraying 135 chalk ads on sidewalks there.

I occasionally read Illegal Signs, a site which tracks illegal incursions of advertising onto public space, and sometimes it seems like we're so broken down that we no longer question the right of companies to go where we go. We've grown so accustomed to a constant barrage of advertising that we may never question the right of that billboard to exist, or those Vespa pictures to be plastered in our alleys, or that giant inflatable bag of candy to be "tested out" in a public park. But in my view, there are already so many legal ways for a corporation to put its message before my eyes that we really don't need to sacrifice more of our public space to them when they're breaking the few restrictions that do exist.

Some refer to this ad creep as "guerilla" advertising, but though these companies use unconventional tactics, they're certainly not underdogs operating from a position of disadvantage. They're typically very powerful companies who are merely abusing their power and prominence. They're well aware that in the time it takes a city bureaucracy or a citizen's group to react, thousands of eyes will have already seen their message, and by the time it's taken down it'll have already served its purpose. They know that a token fine may be cheaper than the cost of a permit to conduct their campaign, and that going ahead without one is probably faster and more effective to boot. In that light, their usual "Oopsie!" defence rings hollow.

In the DC case, Verizon spokesperson Vanessa Banks demurred. "It's harder and harder to catch consumers' attention, so many companies, including us, are turning to nontraditional advertisements," she said. "At this point, of course, I don't think we'll be trying it again."

We'll see about that.

 

Comments

Neither the author nor Spacing necessarily agree with the comments posted below. Spacing reserves the right to edit or delete comments entirely. See our Comment Policy.

The highly excellent bike path along the river in Lachine/Lasalle/Verdun had ads painted on the path for radio lasalle.

Bust the buggers, this is a park and bike path, not an ad-space.

Comment by sid
July 22, 2008 | 2:31 pm
 
Post a comment
Making the ad creeps pay
By







Advertise with Spacing
Spacing Store

Where to Buy Spacing Magazine