senckađ
Group745
Group745
Group745
Group745
Group745
Group745
Creative in association withGear Seven
Group745

This Animated Musical Highlights the Dark Side of the Pet Trade

06/05/2016
Advertising Agency
São Paulo, Brazil
109
Share
Leo Burnett Tailor Made Brazil works with the Animal Hope Project on '#aintcute' campaign
That adorable puppy you see at pet shops, all groomed and wearing a ribbon, will just about make anyone want to take it home. But do you know how it got there? It may have been through some hard times before reaching the shop window, warns the new "Ain’t cute" campaign by the Animal Hope Project (PEA). The action sparks attention to a recurrent theme in Brazilian’s daily life, but one that often goes unnoticed: the illegal breeding and raising of animals and cases of animal cruelty that go on behind closed doors in the pet trade. 
 
The film, created by Leo Burnett Tailor Made, shows that amid filthy, crowded cages and diseases, females are made to copulate more than five times a day. They even mate with their own offspring and are then discarded. The animated scenes go on to show puppies that are blind, deaf and even without a paw, which are all the result of irresponsibility. To avoid expenses these animals are almost never vaccinated and can die before reaching three months of age. The survivors of this series of mistreatment are those little pups in the display windows waiting for an owner.


 
The campaign encourages the adoption of animals and seeks to show the public that they are often as much a victim as the animals themselves for not knowing what happens to pedigree puppies before they are bought. That’s what the lyrics of the film’s soundtrack tells us. These are interpreted by the puppies at a bouncy rhythm reminiscent of Broadway musicals.
 
"The practice of illegally breeding and selling puppies is common in large Brazilian cities. The government, unfortunately, has neither the people nor the resources for this fight, and a lenient legislation does little to inhibit those who sell animals on the streets. Illegal breeding is difficult to control because it occurs inside people’s homes, often on rural properties or warehouses. Only when neighbours make a complaint - due either to the loud barking and crying of dogs or to the foul smell - can the health surveillance authorities or the police locate and identify these places. Many of the animals on display in pet shops come from illegal breeders and as the animals have no serial number, it is impossible to identify their place of origin," says Carlos Rosolen, CEO for PEA.
 
Abandoned Pets

The film also shows another reality behind the animal trade; the abandoning of pets after their purchase. According to IBGE (a Brazilian statistical institution), Brazil’s 132 million pets make it the fourth country with the greatest number of pets; and the second in number of pet dogs, with 52 million in 2013. The World Health Organization estimates that in Brazil alone there are over 30 million abandoned animals, 20 million of which are dogs. There is one dog for every five inhabitants in large cities. Of these, 10 per cent are abandoned. The situation is not much different in smaller towns in the countryside. In many cases, the number reaches 1/4 that of the human population.
 
In April last year, the House of Representatives approved a bill that makes threatening the physical or mental health of dogs and cats a crime. Currently, the law punishes with three months’ to a year’s open or semi-open detention whoever mistreats, injures or mutilates an animal. The sentence is extended by one sixth to one third if the crime causes the animal’s death. Under the proposal, the sentence for killing any one of these animals will be 1 to 3 years imprisonment and can be extended by a third if the crime is committed using poison, fire, suffocation, beatings, dragging, torture or any other form of cruelty; and doubled, if more than two people commit the crime or if it is committed by the pet owner. The proposal also criminalises the abandonment of dogs and cats, with three to twelve months’ imprisonment.
Credits
Brand
Agency / Creative
Production
Post Production / VFX
Editorial
Music / Sound
Work from Leo Burnett Tailor Made
The Originary Map
SOS Amazônia
27/03/2024
9
0
29
0
Inboxing
FIAT
15/08/2023
11
0
ALL THEIR WORK