Stock Art Services Agree to Stop Accepting Images of Wild Animals in 'Unnatural' Poses

PETA persuades sites to limit shots to zoos and natural habitats

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It used to be a go-to gag in advertising to dress a chimpanzee in a tiny men’s suit, topped off with a fedora, and put him in a commercial. He seemed to be smiling, so he was having a good time, right?

What about that orangutan riding a bicycle? Or the ape playing musical instruments?

Those images, which once proliferated in media and marketing, have largely been dropped from mainstream advertising through a concerted, years-long effort by PETA, which says the portrayals are damaging to conservation efforts and to the primates themselves.

After convincing the world’s largest ad agencies—BBDO, DDB, Grey, Leo Burnett, McCann and Y&R among them—to stop using great apes in their ad campaigns, PETA turned its attention recently to stock photo services, asking the companies to take “unnatural” depictions of the animals out of circulation.

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