Ricky Gervais clashes with London transport body over ‘rejected’ vodka ads

‘It’s satire.’

Ricky Gervais has kicked off a brand-safety storm after claiming Transport for London (the UK authority behind the London Underground) rejected a series of dark-humoured ads for the comedian’s vodka brand, Dutch Barn, only for the network to fire back that the posters were never submitted.

Gervais posted mock-ups showing himself with vodka in hand alongside slogans such as “One day you’ll be underground for good” and “Welcome to London. Don’t forget your stab vest.”

He argued the Underground balked at an implied message that life is short so people should drink, leading to an expletive-laden gripe about censorship and “cowardly” decision-makers.

“It’s satire,” Gervais said.

“Sometimes there’s just nothing wrong with them.” Reaction was split: some fans called the ads “bangers,” others questioned whether the knife-crime nod was tone-deaf.

Knife-crime context heightens scrutiny

The blow-up arrived as knife-violence concerns spiked in Britain.

A day after Gervais’ posts, two men attacked passengers on a high-speed train from Doncaster to London King’s Cross, injuring 11; police arrested two suspects on scene. While unrelated to terrorism, the timing sharpened sensitivities around messaging referencing violent crime, even in satire.

London transport says: ‘We never saw them’

TfL issued a brisk correction regarding Gervais’ claims: “These adverts were never referred to TfL or their advertising partners for consideration.”

The organisation noted other Dutch Barn ads are running on its network.

In a follow-up Instagram video, Gervais accused unnamed decision-makers of blocking harmless satire, saying he was “****ing sick and tired” of pushback on his billboards and mocking the idea anyone would see the ads as encouragement to drink excessively.

“Oh my God, cowardly ****ing **nts,” he said, before pivoting to a tongue-in-cheek vow to “sell directly to you… save donkeys, **** censors, Dutch Barn.”

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