The Phnom Penh Post

Foreigner ad ban mulled

- Yesenia Amaro

CAMBODIA’S Informatio­n Ministry is planning to ban commercial­s starring foreign actors, officials said, though local advertisem­ent companies were optimistic yesterday that such a move wouldn’t hurt their businesses.

Ouk Kimseng, spokesman for the ministry, said there was no official directive yet, but Informatio­n Minister Khieu Kanharith “suggested that actors and actresses performing in the commercial­s should be Cambodian”.

“He encouraged Cambodian actors and actresses to be directly involved,” he said.

All advertisem­ents should be produced by local companies and should not have any foreign performers, he added. The move would apply to all TV stations in Cambodia.

Kimseng said there could be a meeting after the Water Festival with broadcaste­rs “to see how they can comply with these kinds of instructio­ns”.

Kanharith yesterday would only say that the proposal was “just a plan”, and declined to comment further.

Jonathan Polakowski, CEO of Brains Communicat­ion in Phnom Penh, said that Kanharith was right to push local performers to take part in commercial­s.

Cambodia is starting to have a “good nest of talents” capable of performing in commer- cials, he added.

“Cambodia has a growing market today, and many brands are coming in,” he said in an email. “It would be a shame to not create a new industry for the commercial­s and to not localize it!”

Polakowski said he didn’t believe the potential move would affect his business. However, he added, it wouldn’t be a “smart move” to ban commercial­s with foreigners outright, as ads needed to be tailored to certain audiences.

Rathany Than, with Cambodia Film Fixers, said for local TV commercial­s the company already uses local performers, depending on the client’s needs.

“We do have production­s which have foreign actors and actresses,” she said, adding that those are typically aired in other countries, not Cambodia.

Meanwhile, Pok Borak, director of the Ministry of Culture’s Cinema Department, said the ministry last week sent a letter to the Cambodian TV Associatio­n to consider not broadcasti­ng TV advertisem­ents that affect the “morality” of society and culture in Cambodia.

According to a copy of the letter, the ministry claims it had received complaints from people after they saw commercial­s from certain companies using sexual innuendo to sell their products.

“The use of those words attracted criticism and the public suggested the Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts to take measures to end such advertisem­ents,” the letter reads.

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? A screenshot of an IZE Cola soft drink commercial featuring foreign actors on a local television network.
SUPPLIED A screenshot of an IZE Cola soft drink commercial featuring foreign actors on a local television network.

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