It turns out a slew of your favourite celebrities might actually be bad ass criminals.
While theyโre certainly not Hollywoodโs real-life answer to Suicide Squad (sorry to disappoint), at least 90 celebs and Instagram influencers are in big trouble with the FTC for not disclosing when a social media post has been sponsored.
If you thought the โ#adโ hashtag at the end of (very obvious) advertisements on your feed were just celebsโ way of distancing themselves from the often super cringe photos theyโre being paid to post, itโs actually because itโs illegal not to state exactly that.
Earlier today, the Federal Trade Commission released a statement saying it has sent letters to almost 100 famous celebrities or Insta-stars reminding them of the rules surrounding paid posts, including anything given as a gift by a brand (AKA those free private jets the Jenners and Hadids have been zipping around in, of late).
While the statement didnโt disclose the exact recipients of said letter, The Fashion Law seems to have a pretty fair idea, stating, โthe Kardashian/Jenners, A$AP Rocky, David and Victoria Beckham; actresses Anne Hathaway, Blake Lively, Ashley Benz, Shay Mitchell, and Lucy Hale; models Bella and Gigi Hadid, Irina Shayk, Emily Ratajkowski, Naomi Campbell, Chrissy Teigen, and Heidi Klum; Scott Disick, Pharrell, Steph Curry, Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Drake, One Direction members Louis Tomlinson and Niall Horan; and Jennifer Lopezโ were among those whose names were specifically mentioned to the FTC.
Among other things, the letter addresses that on mobile, viewers only see the top three lines of captions and have to click โmoreโ to read the rest. Therefore, it should be obvious within the first sentence when a post is sponsored.
It also points out that hashtags such as โ#spโ and โ#partnerโ, as well as โThanks [Brand]โ werenโt enough, so prepare for some painful captions in the very near future.