No joke: UK comedian told to remove hot dog from subway poster over junk food ban

Full Screen
1 / 2

A view of a poster advertising comedian Ed Gamble's Hot Diggity Dog tour on the Bakerloo line platform at Embankment underground station in London, Wednesday March 27, 2024. Gamble has been ordered to change a subway station poster campaign for his new standup show because the image of a hot dog violated the transit networks ban on junk food advertising. The poster for the show, Hot Diggity Dog, showed a mustard- and ketchup-smeared Gamble beside a half-eaten hot dog on a plate. A bemused Gamble replaced the wiener with a cucumber, and the poster was approved. (Joe Sene/PA via AP)

LONDON ā€“ On the London Underground, hot dogs are no joking matter.

Comedian Ed Gamble has been ordered to change a subway station poster campaign for his new standup show because the image of a hot dog violated the transit networkā€™s ban on junk food advertising.

Recommended Videos



The poster for the show, ā€œHot Diggity Dog,ā€ showed a mustard- and ketchup-smeared Gamble beside a half-eaten hot dog on a plate.

A bemused Gamble replaced the wiener with a cucumber, and the poster was approved.

Gamble, who is diabetic and co-hosts the ā€œOff Menuā€ food podcast, said he could see the point of the ad rules, which are intended to help curb obesity in children.

ā€œBut the new posters promote something way more harmful ā€” the idea that cucumbers pair well with ketchup and mustard,ā€ he said.

Gamble isnā€™t complaining about the extra publicity the case has generated.

ā€œThe posters are making way beyond their value now,ā€ he told the BBC on Thursday.

Since 2019, Transport for London has banned ads for foods that are high in fat, sugar and salt from the cityā€™s subway trains and stations, buses and bus shelters. It also bars advertisements that promote unhealthy or unrealistic body shapes.

ā€œFollowing a review of the advert, we advised that elements would need to be removed or obscured to ensure it complied with our policy,ā€ the transit operator said. ā€œA revised advert is now running on the network and we are always happy to work with people to ensure adverts follow our policy.ā€

Last year a poster for the play ā€œTony nā€™ Tinaā€™s Weddingā€ featuring a large wedding cake fell foul of the rules. TFL ordered the cake to be cut from the ad.

The ad policy has attracted the ire of Britainā€™s tabloid press, with The Sun slamming ā€œkilljoy TFL bosses.ā€


Recommended Videos