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ismnotwasm

(42,443 posts)
Thu Jun 19, 2014, 04:49 PM Jun 2014

Beauty companies now want women to feel insecure about our insecurities

Ask for more money. Stop with the "up-speak". Love your body! The helpful pieces of very public advice thrown at women sure are starting to sound more like orders than encouragement. And the latest bit of go-get-'em girl guidance – a commercial from Pantene imploring women to stop apologizing for everything – has just about sent me over the edge. Because instead of just selling us physical insecurity by implying we're fat or wrinkly, beauty companies are now trying to make us feel insecure about our insecurities – all while giving themselves a pat on the back for "empowering" us to feel better (and collecting our money, of course).

Pantene is the most recent company to fall into the "confidence gap": telling women that the source of their woes isn't workplace inequality or crappy partners who don't do their fair share, but women themselves. According to this new dictum, women are self-sabotaging at work, love and life.

The shampoo giant's new ad, part of its #ShineStrong campaign – as in, the shiny hair that you'll have if you buy their product – opens with a question: "Why are women always apologizing?" Viewers are then treated to vignettes of women saying "sorry" for various non-infractions – including, but not limited to: a woman in a business meeting who interrupts a colleague with, "Sorry, can I ask a stupid question?"; a woman who takes back stolen bed-covers from her partner; and a harried mom apologizing for handing a toddler over to dad.

It's hard to disagree with the premise – it's true, these women have nothing for which they need to apologize (and yet many women still do in those situations). The same goes for Dove's incredibly popular "real beauty" campaign – yes, all body types should be accepted and loved. But there's something incredibly irritating, and crass, about beauty purveyors instructing women to "stop apologizing" or "stop hating their bodies" when many such insecurities stem, at least in part, from these very companies' advertisements.

Let's not forget, for example, that Dove's parent company Unilever not only produces the scourge-of-the-nostrils Axe Body Spray – not exactly a bastion of female empowerment – but actual skin lightening creams for women of color. Love your body ... so long as you're white?


http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/jun/19/beauty-companies-women-pantene-sorry
13 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Beauty companies now want women to feel insecure about our insecurities (Original Post) ismnotwasm Jun 2014 OP
As I get older, I get bolder. CTyankee Jun 2014 #1
Heh! ismnotwasm Jun 2014 #2
People need to stop looking at ads as best they can. SheilaT Jun 2014 #3
That's a solution for individuals. redqueen Jun 2014 #4
Those who see them probably should speak up. SheilaT Jun 2014 #6
just heard about that new campaign from pantene--what nonsense. all niyad Jun 2014 #5
Nothing more empowering than being a good consumer, right? nomorenomore08 Jun 2014 #7
the sad fact is that there will be a lot of women who are completely conditioned niyad Jun 2014 #8
Industrial society would collapse Shivering Jemmy Jun 2014 #10
what it says is that, somewhere along the line, society (read: patriarchy) niyad Jun 2014 #11
Here's the hard question: Shivering Jemmy Jun 2014 #12
would like to believe that we can, there is certainly a lot of effort being made. niyad Jun 2014 #13
Humans need 4 things Shivering Jemmy Jun 2014 #9

CTyankee

(64,929 posts)
1. As I get older, I get bolder.
Thu Jun 19, 2014, 04:57 PM
Jun 2014

I don't much give a sh*t what I say (as long as it isn't hurtful to people) when it comes to stuff like this. I am now plotting with my 18 year old granddaughter to be a guerrilla fighter in this thing. I figure I can make some inroads with a young woman needing to arm herself with everything she's got (and she's got a LOT) and goes off to college...age DOES have its advantages!

 

SheilaT

(23,156 posts)
3. People need to stop looking at ads as best they can.
Thu Jun 19, 2014, 05:36 PM
Jun 2014

The first thing is to turn off commercial TV. Secondly, be very selective about the magazines you read.

redqueen

(115,164 posts)
4. That's a solution for individuals.
Thu Jun 19, 2014, 05:43 PM
Jun 2014

Yes it does help us individually if we just don't watch commercial TV, look at billboards, listen to ads on the radio, etc.

However that ignores the fact that millions of others are still being bombarded with toxic messages. So the best thing to do is to talk about them so that others who read about them and might see the ads not only will be less susceptible to the ads themselves, but may also in turn tell others.

IMO women need to do a lot less 'just ignoring it' and a lot more 'speaking the fuck up'.

 

SheilaT

(23,156 posts)
6. Those who see them probably should speak up.
Thu Jun 19, 2014, 06:01 PM
Jun 2014

Since I don't own a TV and therefore see very little commercial advertising, there is simply a huge lot I've never seen. People have no clue how sucked in they are by all the incredible commercialism, and all the trivialization of almost everything, unless they actually disconnect from all of that for a significant period of time.

I am quite well informed (in my opinion) about those things that matter, and I have zero interest in almost any celebrity news, or caring about who is dating or divorcing someone.

Right now I'm staying with my sister for a week, and I'm going slightly crazy because the TV is on from first thing in the morning until last thing at night. Right now I'm in the dining room with my laptop and typing this. I am beginning to feel dumber just by being bombarded with the TV all day.

niyad

(119,639 posts)
5. just heard about that new campaign from pantene--what nonsense. all
Thu Jun 19, 2014, 05:46 PM
Jun 2014

designed, of course, to make one feel good about purchasing their products --LOOK how they are empowering us!!!! fortunately, too old and much too cranky to be amused by this latest mind game.

niyad

(119,639 posts)
8. the sad fact is that there will be a lot of women who are completely conditioned
Fri Jun 20, 2014, 10:41 AM
Jun 2014

to fall for this bs.

Shivering Jemmy

(900 posts)
10. Industrial society would collapse
Sat Jun 21, 2014, 11:41 AM
Jun 2014

If we couldn't get people to buy stuff they don't need.

Not sure what that says about us.

niyad

(119,639 posts)
11. what it says is that, somewhere along the line, society (read: patriarchy)
Sat Jun 21, 2014, 11:47 AM
Jun 2014

made some truly non-life-affirming decisions about the direction to go, and we continue to pay the price.

Shivering Jemmy

(900 posts)
12. Here's the hard question:
Sat Jun 21, 2014, 11:58 AM
Jun 2014

Can we fix it without destroying ourselves? Or have we painted ourselves into a corner?

Shivering Jemmy

(900 posts)
9. Humans need 4 things
Sat Jun 21, 2014, 11:39 AM
Jun 2014

Food, shelter, sleep and affection.

Everything beyond that is a need someone has created in us through a process of convincement.

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