The February 2023 Ladbrokes ad, which took the form of a promoted tweet, featured Paul following his bout with English professional boxer Tommy Fury.
The ASA claimed that this represented a breach of its advertising code due to Paul’s popularity with under-18s. Following the decision, the ASA ordered the ad not to appear in its current form.
Ladbrokes initially defended the ad, arguing that it included no calls to action, promotional offers or links back to the Ladbrokes site. The company pointed to an age-gate it had implemented on its feed. This meant users could not be access the ad unless Twitter had accepted that they were over-18.
The operator also said that boxing is not listed as being of moderate or high-risk sport under the CAP guidelines.
Additionally, the business said that it had assessed Paul’s follower profile, brand partnerships and sponsorships to determine the level of risk. The company noted that the influencer currently has a number of deals with alcohol and cryptocurrency businesses.
ASA upholds complaint
However, despite Ladbrokes defence, the ASA opted to uphold the complaint. As evidence for this the body pointed to the Paul’s 65 million social media followers across multiple platforms. The ASA emphasised around 3 million followers are registered as under-18s on each site.
The organisation also highlighted that Paul featured on children’s TV programme Bizaardvark from 2016 to 2018, a show about two teenagers. The ASA added that the target audience for the programme would include some people under the age of 18 as of 2023.
“We therefore considered it was likely that the target audience for that programme would be around the same age and that therefore it was likely to have a strong appeal to under-18s,” said the ASA.
Second Ladbrokes ad offense
The decision is not the first time the ASA has decided to act against a Ladbrokes ad. In July 2021, the self-regulatory body upheld a complaint against the betting and gaming operator. The ad took place as part of Ladbroke’s April 2021 “Where the Nation Plays” campaign.
The case concerned an advert which involved scenes of three men placing bets on the Ladbrokes app and their various reactions to a football game. In that case, the operator ruled the ad socially irresponsible and likely to encourage problem gambling.