Group Opposed to Advertising of Liquor and Alcohol Healthwatch and Television New Zealand Ltd - 1994-100, 1994-101
Members
- I W Gallaway (Chair)
- J R Morris
- L M Loates
- R A Barraclough
Dated
Complainant
- Group Opposed to Advertising of Liquor (GOAL) , Alcohol Healthwatch
Number
1994-100–101
Programme
Body and SoulBroadcaster
Television New Zealand LtdChannel/Station
TVNZ 1Standards
Standards Breached
Summary
The fitness assessment segment on Body and Soul broadcast on Television One at
9.05pm on 15 July featured All Black Frank Bunce. The weekly magazine programme
presents items on healthy lifestyles.
The Secretary of the Group Opposed to Advertising of Liquor (GOAL), Mr Turner,
complained to Television New Zealand Ltd, the broadcaster, that because the item
showed Mr Bunce – an All Black hero – ordering a glass of beer in a hotel and wearing a
shirt carrying Lion Red beer advertising, it breached a number of the standards relating
to the incidental promotion of liquor.
The same matters were raised in the complaint from the Health Promotion Advisor
with Alcohol Healthwatch, Ms Morgan. Particular concern was expressed as, it was
said, that Mr Bunce worked for Lion Breweries.
Acknowledging that parts of the broadcast amounted to a serious infringement of the
standards, TVNZ upheld aspects of the complaint and advised GOAL that the
transgression had been brought to the programme producer's attention. It declined to
uphold the aspects of the complaint that the broadcast involved an arrangement to
allow for the contrived promotion of liquor, or that the incidental promotion
contravened the prohibition on saturation.
Dissatisfied that those aspects were not upheld, Mr Turner on GOAL's behalf
referred them to the Authority under s.8(1)(a) of the Broadcasting Act 1989. On
Alcohol Healthwatch' behalf, Ms Morgan expressed dissatisfaction with the action
taken by TVNZ on the aspect of the complaint upheld when she referred that matter
to the Authority under s.8(1)(a).
For the reasons below, the Authority endorsed TVNZ's decision on the aspects upheld
and declined to uphold the points raised by GOAL in its complaint to the Authority. As
for the action taken by TVNZ, the Authority decided that it was insufficient and that a
broadcast statement was appropriate.
Decision
The members of the Authority have viewed a tape of the programme complained
about and have read the correspondence (summarised in the Appendix). As is its
practice, the Authority has determined the complaints without a formal hearing.
A fitness assessment of a celebrity is a regular feature segment of the weekly magazine
programme, Body and Soul which focuses on healthy lifestyles.
All Black Frank Bunce was the celebrity featured on the programme broadcast on 15
July and both his eating and drinking habits were contrasted with the healthy lifestyle
expected of a high profile sportsperson. The item began with Mr Bunce entering a bar
and, after requesting water (described by the presenter as the "wrong drink"), he
entered again and asked for what the presenter called the "right drink" and was given a
glass of beer. During the fitness exercises, he was shown wearing a t-shirt carrying
advertising for Lion Red beer.
GOAL's spokesperson, Mr Cliff Turner, and Alcohol Healthwatch's Ms Cherry
Morgan complained to TVNZ that the broadcast breached the following provisions in
the Programme Standards for the Promotion of Liquor.
A1 Saturation of liquor promotions, separately or in combination, must be
avoided. In addition, liquor advertisements shall not be broadcast
consecutively in any one break.
A3 Broadcasters will ensure that the incidental promotion of liquor is
minimised and in particular:
a. Will not be a party to any contract or arrangement where incidental
liquor promotion is a contrived part of the programme.
c. Will not unduly focus in a live or on-location event on any particular
advertising signage, logo or any other sound or visual effect which
promotes liquor.
It is recognised that incidental liquor promotion occurs from time to time in
programmes where broadcasters have little or no control over the situation. In
those situations they must minimise the exposure to the best of their ability.
Where broadcasters have control of the situation, they will ensure that the
standards regarding incidental promotion are followed in the spirit as well as the
letter.
On the basis that the incidental promotion of liquor had not been minimised in a
situation over which it had control, TVNZ upheld the complaint under standard A3.c.
As the segment containing the incidental liquor promotion had been interspersed with
a great deal of other material, TVNZ declined to uphold the saturation complaint under
standard A1. Further, as Mr Bunce had not received a payment from TVNZ for his
appearance, standard A3.a had not been contravened as, TVNZ said, it had not been
"a party to any contract or arrangement".
With regard to the aspect upheld, TVNZ advised the complainants that Body and
Soul's executive producer, who had been advised of the breach, apologised and assured
TVNZ that efforts would be made to ensure that a similar breach did not recur. One
complainant, GOAL, referred the aspects of the complaint not upheld to the
Authority. It did not refer "the action taken" aspect although in a later letter it
questioned TVNZ's action in not checking programmes commissioned from
independent production houses before their broadcast to ensure compliance with the
standards. The other complainant, Alcohol Healthwatch, confined its referral to its
dissatisfaction with the action by TVNZ. It argued that "meaningful sanctions" were
necessary to ensure that the standards were taken seriously by broadcasters.
The Authority began by investigating TVNZ's decision not to uphold the aspects of
the complaint which alleged a breach of standards A1 and A3.a.
With regard to standard A1, saturation occurs within a "viewing period". A minority
of the Authority, taking into account the definition of this term given in previous
decisions, decided that it referred to the entire Body and Soul programme. The
majority, however, argued that the saturation test could be applied to the specific
fitness assessment segment. But the majority was divided as to whether saturation of
liquor promotion had occurred on this occasion. In combination with the minority
which regarded the entire programme as the "viewing period, a majority of the
Authority did not accept that the liquor promotion broadcast on this occasion
contravened the saturation prohibition when measured either over the entire
programme or the specific segment. Accordingly, the Authority declined to uphold
the alleged breach of standard A1.
Whether the broadcast breached standard A3.a depended on the interpretation given to
the provision. A breach requires contravention of the two aspects of the standard - ie
that the broadcaster was "a party to any arrangement or contract" to the situation
where the incidental liquor promotion was "a contrived part of the programme". On
this occasion, the Authority unhesitatingly decided that the shots of Frank Bunce re-
entering a bar and being served with a glass of beer were obviously contrived.
When the definition of the first part has arisen in earlier complaints, GOAL has
stressed the word "arrangement" while TVNZ has espoused the view that the word
"contract" involves some legally binding obligation. In ruling on this dispute, the
Authority has in the past accepted that "arrangement" involves more than an
agreement. In view of the reference in the standard to a contract (albeit unwritten), the
Authority has accepted that it implies a payment of some kind (see decision No:
22/94).
TVNZ has denied that it was a party to any arrangement with Frank Bunce which
involved payment. Accordingly, the Authority decided that the broadcast had not
breached standard A3.a of the Programme Standards.
For the reasons given above, a majority of the Authority declines to uphold the
complaint that the broadcast of Body and Soul by Television New Zealand on 15
July breached standard A1 of the Programme Standards for the Promotion of
Liquor. It unanimously declines to uphold the complaint under standard A3.a
With regard to the action taken, the Authority noted the circumstances surrounding
the breach. TVNZ reported that it had been caught by surprise by what it described
as a "serious infringement". The breach occurred during a weekly magazine
programme which deals with healthy lifestyles and on this occasion featured an All
Black - a hero of the young. The Authority also shared GOAL's reaction when it
questioned whether programmes from independent production houses were
adequately checked before being screened. This inadequacy, in the Authority's
opinion, placed responsibility for the breach squarely on the broadcaster.
As a blatant, serious and, indeed, an astonishing breach of the standards had occurred –
ie a famous All Black and hero of the young entering a bar while the presenter
described water as the wrong drink and beer as the right drink for him in a programme
focussing on healthy lifestyles – the Authority decided that it was an appropriate
occasion on which to impose an order on the broadcaster requiring the broadcast of an
explanation and correction.
For these reasons, the Authority upholds the complaint that the action taken by
Television New Zealand Ltd, having upheld the complaint about the broadcast
of Body and Soul on 15 July 1994, was insufficient.
The Authority decided to impose the following order. As Body and Soul is not at
present being broadcast, the Authority decided that the broadcast should be included
on Really Living which is another locally produced magazine programme dealing with
healthy lifestyles.
Order
Pursuant to s.13(1) of the Broadcasting Act 1989, the Authority orders
Television New Zealand Ltd to broadcast a brief summary of this decision and
an apology, approved by the Authority, arising from complaints concerning an
item on broadcast on 15 July 1994. The statement shall be
broadcast during a Really Living programme within one month of this decision .
In addition, the Authority again expresses its serious concern that in recent weeks
broadcasts involving leading All Black administrators and players have been blatantly
in breach of the Codes. The Voluntary Sports Code was introduced in April 1993 and
the fact that the responsibilities under it have either not been drawn to the attention of
these players and administrators after a period of eighteen months or they have chosen
to ignore it, must place the efficacy of the Code in serious jeopardy.
Signed for and on behalf of the Authority
Iain Gallaway
Chairperson
20 October 1994
Appendix 1
GOAL's Complaint to Television New Zealand Limited – 16 July 1994
The Secretary of the Group Opposed to Advertising of Liquor (GOAL), Mr Cliff
Turner, complained to Television New Zealand Ltd about part of the Body and Soul
programme broadcast on TV One at 9.05pm on 15 July 1994.
The segment had featured All Black Frank Bunce and began by showing Mr Bunce
twice entering a bar. The first time he asked for water but on the second occasion he
asked for what the presenter described as the "right drink". He was given a glass of
beer.
Later in the programme Mr Bunce was shown wearing a shirt carrying prominent
advertising for Lion Red beer.
As the supply of the glass of beer was obviously contrived, GOAL argued that that
segment breached standard A3.a of the Programme Standards for the Promotion of
Liquor. The appearances of the shirt, he maintained was a breach of standard A3.c
while the number of the shirt's appearances amounted to saturation in contravention
of standard A1.
In a second letter dated 18 July, Mr Turner contended that the entire broadcast
involved an additional breach of standard A3.a should Mr Bunce have been paid for
taking part in the programme.
TVNZ's Response to the Formal Complaint – 1 August 1994
TVNZ advised Mr Turner of GOAL of its Complaints Committee's decision and
began by noting that the standards accepted that incidental promotion occurred in
situations over which the broadcaster had little control. In these situations the
broadcaster's responsibility was to minimise the exposure to the best of its ability.
Where the broadcaster had control, TVNZ continued, it was required to follow the
standards in spirit as well as by the letter.
TVNZ then said it upheld the aspect of the complaint that the broadcast had breached
standard A3.c and commented:
There was clear evidence that in this case TVNZ (as broadcaster) had not taken
sufficient steps to ensure that the incidental promotion of liquor was
minimised. The committee felt that, as the producer had control of the
situation, he should not have allowed the reference to the "real drink", and he
should have insisted that Mr Bunce wear something other than the shirt
bearing the "Lion Red" logo.
The breach of the codes has caught TVNZ by surprise. We believe that on the
whole we are successfully curbing the incidental promotion of liquor in areas
such as sports and news, where it is most likely to occur. That it should
become an issue on a health and lifestyle programme such as "Body and Soul"
was quite unexpected.
The executive producer of "Body and Soul" has already been advised of the
breach and in a facsimile to me received today he says:
"Firstly, apologies for having drawn the complaint in the first place.
Secondly, please accept my assurance that the Programme Standards
concerning the Promotion of Liquor will be drawn to the attention of
our reporters and producers and we will do our utmost to ensure that
there is no recurrence of the problem."
TVNZ declined to uphold any other aspect of the complaint. The saturation
prohibition had not been transgressed as segments containing incidental liquor
promotion were interspersed with a great deal of other material. As Mr Bunce had
received no payment for his appearance, TVNZ added, A3.a had not been
contravened.
GOAL's Complaint to the Broadcasting Standards Authority – 4 August 1994
Dissatisfied that the complaint had not been upheld in full, Mr Turner on GOAL's
behalf referred it to the Broadcasting Standards Authority under s.8(1)(a) of the
Broadcasting Act 1989.
With regard to the alleged breach of standard A3.a, Mr Turner pointed to the phrase in
the standard "contract or arrangement" - and maintained accordingly that the argument
that the fact that Mr Bunce was not paid was irrelevant. He continued:
The camera team did not happen upon Mr Bunce in the bar by chance; there
was clearly an arrangement that the crew and Mr Bunce would be at the bar
simultaneously.
He also insisted that the saturation prohibition in standard A1 had been breached
because of the accolade bestowed on the beer near the beginning of the item and the
subsequent visuals of the advertisement on Mr Bunce's shirt.
TVNZ's Response to the Broadcasting Standards Authority – 5 September 1994
As is its practice, on 8 August the Authority sought the broadcaster's response to the
referral.
Beginning by pointing out that the complaint had been upheld as a "serious
infringement" of standards A3 and A3.c, TVNZ repeated that Mr Bunce had not been
paid for his appearance and added that TVNZ was not a party to any arrangement
involving the assessment of Mr Bunce's fitness. It concluded:
We are strongly of the view that the complainant's interpretation of the
standard is incorrect. Being a party to a contract or arrangement clearly
implies some form of enforceable agreement with legal consideration.
As that did not apply in the current situation, it declined to uphold the standard A3.a
aspect of the complaint.
TVNZ also repeated its contention that the spoken and visual references to Lion Red
beer did not amount to saturation in contravention of standard A1.
GOAL'S Final Comment to the Authority – 12 September 1994
When asked to comment briefly on TVNZ's reply, on GOAL's behalf Mr Turner
acknowledged:
The resolution of part of this complaint turns largely upon the meaning of the
word "arrangement" in A3.a. I continue to believe that whereas the word
"contract" has financial connotations these connotations do not apply to the
word "arrangement".
He maintained that TVNZ had "arranged" to meet Mr Bunce in the hotel to film part
of the item.
Although he did not want to comment further on the saturation (standard A1) aspect
of the complaint, Mr Turner stressed:
I believe that the Authority should be concerned about the admission by
TVNZ that "The breach of the codes has caught TVNZ by surprise". (Letter
to GOAL dated 1 August 1994).
The inference that must be taken from this statement is that programmes
commissioned from independent production houses go to air without being
checked by TVNZ to ensure that they comply with the rules and standards
Appendix II
Alcohol Healthwatch's Complaint to Television New Zealand Limited – 19 July
1994
The Heath Promotion Adviser with Alcohol Healthwatch, Mrs Cherry Morgan,
complained to Television New Zealand Ltd about part of the Body and Soul.
programme broadcast Television One at 9.05pm on 15 July 1994.
The segment had featured All Black Frank Bunce and began by showing Mr Bunce
twice entering a bar. The first time he asked for water but on the second occasion he
asked for what the presenter described as the "right drink". He was given a glass of
beer.
Later in the programme Mr Bunce – "an All Black hero" – was shown wearing a shirt
carrying prominent advertising for Lion Red beer.
As the supply of the glass of beer was obviously contrived, Alcohol Healthwatch
argued that that segment breached A3.a of the Programme Standards for the Promotion
of Liquor. The appearances of the shirt, he maintained was a breach of standard A3.c
while the number of the shirt's appearances amounted to saturation in contravention
of standard A1. The complaint observed:
It was totally unnecessary and avoidable for him to wear a singlet with
prominent liquor logos.
Particular concern was expressed about the level of Lion promotions in view of the
fact that Mr Bunce worked for Lion Breweries.
TVNZ's Response to the Formal Complaint – 1 August 1994
TVNZ advised Ms Morgan of Alcohol Healthwatch of its Complaints Committee's
decision which was similar to the report to GOAL (see Appendix I).
Alcohol Healthwatch's Complaint to the Broadcasting Standards Authority –
19 August 1994
Dissatisfied with TVNZ's action having upheld what it accepted as a serious
infringement of the standards, Ms Anna Radford on Alcohol Healthwatch's behalf
referred that matter to the Broadcasting Standards Authority under s.8(1)(a) of the
Broadcasting Act.
Ms Radford wrote:
... we are deeply concerned that, beyond apologising to Alcohol Healthwatch,
there has been no sanction for this breach. This in effect makes a mockery of
the codes governing broadcast alcohol advertising. Unless there are meaningful
sanctions against broadcasters who breach the codes – ... – [they] will be seen
as little more than a paper tiger.
TVNZ's Reply to the Authority – 14 September 1994
TVNZ declined to comment further on the referral to the Authority.
Alcohol Healthwatch's Final Comment to the Authority – 19 September 1994
Ms Radford advised that Alcohol Healthwatch also did not want to comment further.