Heinz Recipe for Trouble: Hold the Ad

A commercial for Heinz Deli Mayo stirs up controversy in the U.K.

ByABC News
June 26, 2008, 8:14 AM

LONDON, June 26, 2008 — -- The Heinz Co., best know for its "57 Varieties" slogan, is finding out that there is more than one variety of public relations trouble.

The condiment giant yanked a television commercial last week for its new Heinz Deli Mayo in Great Britain because of complaints that the ad featured a quick kiss between two men.

But taking the ad down may have only compounded Heinz's problem by angering the country's gay activists, who are now organizing online protests and calling for a boycott of all Heinz products.

The commercial, which only ran in Great Britain, begins with a morning routine: Two young children get ready for school, a father prepares for work, and a man with a New York accent and dressed as a deli worker makes sandwiches in the kitchen.

The children call the deli worker Mum, and as the father leaves for work he says, "See you tonight, love," and leans over the counter to kiss the cook before heading out the door.

The commercial was too saucy for some. It provoked more than 200 complaints, according to the Advertising Standards Authority, an independent watchdog group that monitors U.K. advertising codes.

Fox News' host Bill O'Reilly complained about the advertisement last week on his show, "The O'Reilly Factor."

"I just want mayonnaise," O'Reilly said. "I don't want guys kissing."

Heinz said the advertisement was intended to be humorous.

The company released a statement clarifying that the concept behind the commercial is that the product tastes so good, "it's as if you have your own New York deli man in your kitchen."

Lynsay Taffe, the communications and policy manager for ASA, said most of the complaints about the commercial came from parents who believed it was inappropriate for children.

"Some parents were concerned that the ad would force them to explain same-sex relationships and homosexuality to their children," she said in an interview with ABC News.

But when millions of viewers watch television commercials, are 200 complaints significant?

According to Taffe, "It is quite a lot, especially within only a couple of days of the ad launching." She said that the Heinz Deli Mayo ad is one of the five most-complained-about ads in the United Kingdom so far this year.