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Greenpeace ages world leaders in head-turning ads

2009-12-08 11:32:09

Mon Dec 7, 5:40 pm ET

The environmental activism group Greenpeace, no stranger to controversy, is at

it again. In conjunction with the start of the U.N. Climate Change Conference

in Denmark, the group has teamed up with TckTckTck to plaster the Copenhagen

airport with advertisements featuring drastically altered images of famous

world leaders participating in the summit. Though some industry observers have

labeled the campaign "lame" and "dour," the group says the reaction to the ads

thus far has been "phenomenal."

Barack Obama Greenpeace ad

The aforementioned posters feature the faces of U.S. President Barack Obama,

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and British

Prime Minister Gordon Brown, just to name a few, as they would possibly look in

2020. Next to each leader's image is an apology from the future that reads,

"I'm sorry. We could have stopped catastrophic climate change... We didn't."

Toby Cotton, the writer of the ads, said his intention was to make "world

leaders think twice about the consequences of their action or inaction now."

When asked by Yahoo News! if the ads have generated any reaction from the

various world leaders or their camps, a Washington, D.C.-based Greenpeace

spokesperson said, "We look forward to the reactions of heads of state as they

arrive," adding that the ads have been "quite popular" with the general public

so far.

See full set of Greenpeace posters on Flickr.