KFC gets through 700 million chickens a year worldwide
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A TV advert for fast food chain KFC has been banned for misleading people about the size of a burger.
The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) upheld five complaints that the chicken fillet was larger in the TV commercial than in real-life.
It found the advertised bun was thicker than those it bought in a London outlet and that there was "more filling and the lettuce was a different type".
KFC said the advert burgers were within the "standard range of dimensions".
It suggested the women in the advert may have had small hands - thus making the burger appear bigger - and that the name of the burger indicated it was smaller than other burgers.
Size and presentation
In the advert in question, a group of people are eating KFC's Mini Fillet chicken burgers at a railway station.
"Advertisers are permitted to present their products in a favourable light but not in a way likely to mislead viewers," said the ASA.
"Even though the product was called a mini chicken fillet burger, we do not think this was sufficient to alert consumers to the fact the product was smaller than appeared in the advertisement."