Hidden messages can be created in visual mediums with techniques such as
hidden computer text and
steganography. In the 1980s, Coca-Cola released in South Australia an advertising poster featuring the reintroduced contour bottle, with a speech bubble, "Feel the Curves!!" An image hidden inside one of the ice cubes depicted an oral sex act. Thousands of posters were distributed to hotels and bottle shops in Australia before the mistake was discovered by Coca-Cola management. The artist of the poster was fired and all the posters were recalled. Various other messages have been claimed to exist in Disney movies, some of them risque, such as the well-known allegation of an erection showing on a priest in
The Little Mermaid. According to the Snopes website, one image "is clearly true [and] undeniably purposely inserted into the movie": a topless woman in two frames of
The Rescuers.
PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) had an antipathy towards
PETCO, a pet food retailer in San Diego, regarding the purported mistreatment of live animals at their stores. When the
San Diego Padres baseball team announced that the retailer had purchased
naming rights to
Petco Park, PETA was unable to persuade the sports team to terminate the agreement. Later, PETA successfully purchased a commemorative display brick with what appears to be a complimentary message: "Break Open Your Cold Ones! Toast The Padres! Enjoy This Championship Organization!" However, if one takes the first letters of each word, the resulting
acrostic reads "BOYCOTT PETCO". Neither PETCO nor the Padres have taken any action to remove the brick, stating that if someone walked by, they would not know it had anything to do with the PETA/PETCO feud. Secretive design language is widely used on web sites as
Easter eggs or within products as hidden features, such as
In-N-Out Burger's secret menu or the new
Norwegian passport design for security. == See also ==