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Post by OmegaWolf747 on Apr 1, 2017 15:23:17 GMT
We've all seen them in TV ads and catalogs, the cute furry dogs sitting on couches and in cars or running alongside people, all in order to get us to actually look at the product they're advertising. My simple question: Who owns these animals and what happens to them after the ads have been made?
Thank you.
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Post by misstique on Apr 14, 2017 5:56:41 GMT
Ideally, they are owned and cared for by animal trainers who protect them during production and make sure they are not armed. That is VERY important!!!!! Nobody wants an armed animal on the set.
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Post by misstique on Apr 14, 2017 13:12:26 GMT
That is VERY important!!!!! Nobody wants an armed animal on the set. Well, as you know that was a typo, which I've now corrected. So they are not harmed, which is critically important. In the old days, animals were killed during productions. No film or commercial is worth that. Ya, I knew it was a typo, but I just couldn't resist making that joke.  Hope there's no hard feelings. And you are right about animals in Hollywood in the old days. I don't know much about commercials, but they were treated terribly in movies, especially horses in Westerns.
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Post by yezziqa on Apr 14, 2017 13:34:52 GMT
According to a bunch of americans, these swedish kitties probably fell flat to the ground as they lack the capacity to pull the cord.
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Post by yezziqa on Apr 14, 2017 13:41:41 GMT
Ideally, they are owned and cared for by animal trainers who protect them during production and make sure they are not harmed. In America anyway. That wasn't necessarily true in the old days, but it's contractual now. That's a bit odd to say when you are mearly a D-grade. api.worldanimalprotection.org/ You have a long way to go to catch up with the majority of the western countries.
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