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The ad for Coco Pops Granola (pictured), which aired in the UK in January, showed a group of cartoon animals standing on each other's shoulders as they tried to knock a coconut out of a tree.
The ASA concluded that while the advert did focus on Coco Pops Granola, the Coco Pops branding was nevertheless synonymous with other HFSS items in the range. “Coco Pops was a well-established brand, ...
The ASA ruled the Coco Pops branding was “significantly more prominent” than the granola; the focus of the ad was the Coco Pops brand rather than the product. It was therefore an HFSS product ad and ...
A Coco Pops advert has been banned after it was broadcast between back-to-back episodes of a cartoon aimed at young kids. The Advertising Standards Authority has rapped Kellogg's for the Coco Cops ...
Although Coco Pops Granola is not officially classed as junk food, the ASA ruled it should be banned because Coco the Monkey would remind children of Coco Pops - which is classed as a junk food.
The Advertising Standards Authority has overturned a ruling that saw an advert for Coco Pops’ "healthy" granola cereal banned because it featured Coco the Monkey ...
I never eat sugary cereal but this chocolate granola helped me hit my protein goals. ... My first impression after opening the tub was, “this smells and looks like coco pops”.
LONDON — What is the difference between a McDonald’s Happy Meal and a box of Coco Pops? Beyond the obvious, one can be advertised to children on British television, and the other cannot ...