Friday, February 4, 2011

Belle of YSL Opium, the campaign banned TV in England

Banned. Banned. Bandito. Ie: via the television programming and programming in Britain. We talk about the new ad campaign for YSL Opium Belle. In Great Britain is doing a great way to discuss a movie - that's what we show here, as the cover - in which the protagonist Melanie Thierry testimonials and "play with opium" of the perfume advertised "too bold, and above all antieducativo" say Across the Channel, meanwhile, have flocked to the first and complaints ...

As often happens, "New year, new and a ban on new case" media "." This time we're halfway between TV and fashion. The "culprit" in question, if guilty we want to talk, and the pseudo-provocative new video for the campaign to adverstising 2011 2012 maison of Yves Saint Laurent, one of her perfume line.

To launch the new fragrance of Opium Belle, the new fragrance created by YSL, the designer called actress Melanie Thierry and she was asked to dance so suggestimamente Women, "by Bacchante" and Mistress of passion, moving in space set so sexy at the same time creating large scrolls with the arm, real ghgirigori ready to cleave the air, totally inspired by the aroma of incense and opium on the body released from the new YSL essence.

But the problem, if indeed we at Style Trend I wanted to find one, not so much in the dance and unleashed a bit 'tarantolata performing where we see the beautiful actress, sweating, disheveled, struggling and leaving also discovered pieces of white skin that covered only by a white tunic that makes it so much like a goddess of the Greeks, rather than being in the frame where, for a moment and a little more, pointing at the inside of the elbow, the point where many women spray perfume because, they say, "it lasts longer." In short, while she leaves "sting" on his arm from Belle of Opium and turns, turns on itself, creating the most sensual doodles possible, the British moral indignation and, according to the authoritative network WWD - he knows everything and more, and always in the fashion biz in the world preview - also the start of the first complaints from Britain's Advertising Standards Agency, a sort of protection of public morals.

The request is obviously that of "banned", banned the transmission of the commercial break because, they say, the movie and with that gesture allued to drug use and opiate and

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