Filthy, Filthy, Woman! You need Dove Soap!

I know that we are all used to cosmetic advertising that tells us we are all filthy dirty swamp-things salvageable only through the use of [insert product here]. This commercial for soap, however, takes the cake in my opinion. Listed on the Dove website as “Soap Scum TV Ad” the ad admonishes women (because Dove is primarily marketed to women) that even though they may think they are clean because they have used soap, they are actually going about their day covered in a layer of disgusting soap scum. Poor deluded fools!
The commercial continues, “if you could see the difference…” & displays it with a side-by-side dramatized comparison which has the women in their towels under a UV light. The light reveals the scum, in tandem with some ‘scare’ music on the soap-using woman, who looks like she is suffering from an early-stage zombie infection. The Dove-using woman smiles to the tune of some new-age-y music… he skin feels how healthy clean skin is supposed to feel. You know. The feeling you can only get with Dove.
I mean, I’m all for being clean. The implication that women have to be clean under a pretend black-light in order to be socially acceptable is sort of annoying, especially when you contrast it to virtually any man’s cosmetic advertisement. Men who preform basic hygiene functions, such as wearing deodorant, are God’s Gift… women come after them in droves. Women, on the other hand, even when they bathe with soap, are just barely socially acceptable.
The fact is that I’m the last person who would expect a high level of respect or responsibility from the advertising industry, but Dove is the one brand you would think would know better. I don’t think this type of marketing is great for their brand identity, either, and that just makes this that much more annoying.
Check it out:
(Cross-posted at Citizen Girl, with sad zombie picture ;)

Disclaimer: This post was written by a Feministing Community user and does not necessarily reflect the views of any Feministing columnist, editor, or executive director.

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