Racy CWB ad draws criticism

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SASKATOON -- The Canadian Wheat Board is standing by an advertisement that has lassoed controversy.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 31/01/2013 (4815 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

SASKATOON — The Canadian Wheat Board is standing by an advertisement that has lassoed controversy.

The ad features a 1969 print called Hi-Ho, Silver, which shows a young woman in a cowboy hat and skirt straddling a fence. The caption says: “Still on the fence?” and encourages farmers to choose the wheat board for marketing grain.

But the National Farmers Union is questioning what an image of a long-legged woman straddling a fence has to do with selling grain.

CP
.Jeff McIntosh / The Canadian Press
The controversial ad is seen in the Alberta Farmer.
CP .Jeff McIntosh / The Canadian Press The controversial ad is seen in the Alberta Farmer.

Joan Brady, who heads the women’s branch of the farmers union, says the image is inappropriate.

“To me, I really didn’t appreciate first of all, the image that it gave to rural women or women on the farm,” Brady said in a phone interview from Manitoulin Island, Ont.

“Secondly … if I was involved in a western wheat farm, I would be helping to make that decision to purchase contracts with the Canadian board and that would turn me off pretty much very quickly because it dismissed me as a farm operator.”

Dayna Spiring, the CWB’s chief strategy officer, said the ad, which started running in early January, is meant to be edgy, and they stand by it.

 

— The Canadian Press

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