On a lighter vein, I would love to know Vijay Mallya's views on this

http://thehoot.org/web/home/story.php?storyid=3365&mod=1&pg=1&sectionId=19&valid=true

Ads disguised as news?

*If you thought this was a subtle and tasteless campaign for selling more
blades, worse was waiting to come. * K S SUDEEP says he found the
manufactured news about Gillette blades galling.
 Posted Thursday, Oct 09 10:52:16, 2008

We live in a time when we are fed ads disguised as news. We have got quite
used to it over last four or five years, and many of us have even developed
a skill to tell an ad from a news byte. Even so some  ads offend with their
gall.




This time it was Gillete.



On September 17, 2008  *HT City* carried a survey report that 91% of Delhi
women were turned off by unshaven men, 82 percent of Delhi men are
clean-shaven (I refuse to buy that), and across the metros most women found
clean-shaven men more kissable.




It went on to add that 47% of the respondents thought clean shaven men are
more likely to become millionaires (what if 53% thought otherwise), 47%
thought mistakes are overlooked if they are made by clean-shaven men, and
50% think that your Visa application will be rejected if you have a stubbled
look. The survey was conducted by -- no marks for guessing -- Gillette
India.



The survey also gave details of how women liked their favourite stars --
Hritik Roshan, John Abraham, Abhiskek Bachchan and SRK among others --
whether clean-shaven, stubbled or full-bearded.




If you thought this was a subtle and tasteless campaign for selling more
blades, worse was waiting to come.




Audio ads on Delhi FM stations said, "Bankers are more likely to reject your
loan application if you have a stubble." Since there is no such thing as
'news' on most private FM channels, this had to be a "commercial". The rest
of the ad was essentially "Buy Gillette Mach 3 and shave off that stubble"
or something like that.




This series of ads seem to be taking us back in time in more ways than one.


This is not about being better than your competitor. Somewhere, these ads
give me an impression that people don't know there is something called
razors. One senses a throwback to the  "don't stay dirty, get Pears" kind of
advertisements.




(Note that this one can not be compared to advertisements like that of Nokia
Navigator phones, as it is not the case that a company is introducing
shaving blades in the market for the first time.)




Two, they are plain racist.




Do the creators of this campaign really think it is hip to boast about
cultural biases like mistakes being overlooked if you are clean-shaven and
all that? If they really do, I think they need to take a lesson from another
series of ads in town. "I am not fair but I am lovely -- I am not yesterday"
-- say hoardings that carry an image of a beautiful dark model. "Is it true
that women make bad drivers?" "Ask Sunita Williams", goes another ad on air.
Advertising *Mail Today* newspaper, of India Today group.




Two days later, *Delhi Times* showed us clean shaven make-overs of Milind
Soman and Kunal Kapoor. The news, of the launch of 'Gillette Mach 3 Turbo'
in New Delhi, went like this:




"It was part of their macho appeal -- Milind Soman's rugged beard and wild,
long locks, and Kunal Kapoor's urbane but sexy stubble. But the two hunks
have recently shaved off their stubble and chosen to go for the smooth,
clean look. What made them do it was Gillette Mach 3 Turbo."




The actors, however, had a different story to tell. They did not quite owe
up to the 'stubbles are for losers' campaign. They refused to disown the
stubbled or bearded looks that they were in for quite some time now.




"I've never had any problem playing with my looks. We're actors, and need to
meet the demands of different characters. And with Gillette, the best thing
is it doesn't scratch your skin. When I decided to go for a makeover, it's
the only one I could think of," says Kunal.




Milind said, "I don't know if women like men clean-shaven or with a stubble,
but one thing is for sure -- a guy has to be confident about his looks."




Thank god, it is not the end of the world. Even as Gillette is doing its bit
to kill the confidence of the sexy stubbled men.



*Postscript:*  And one wonders how much of that manufactured news in the
city supplements was paid for.






-- 
Bobby Kunhu http://community.eldis.org/myshkin/Blog/

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