So for those of you who don't know, the health and beauty company Dove has been running a campaign called "Real Beauty" for a while now. They seem to emphasize diversity and realistic beauty, rather than the standard Photoshopped magazine model. They've been a huge success, and their latest one seems to have hit home with a lot of women.
This is their latest video, Real Beauty Sketches. It focuses on women being sketched by a forensic artist who cannot see them as they explain their looks, and then another portrait being done of them by people who they've just met. It's supposed to show the difference between your perceived looks and the way other people see you.
I'll admit, I got kind of teary-eyed when I watched it for the first time. The people responsible for editing, production and soundtrack all hit it on the mark and it's a beautiful piece of filming. Then I went about my merry way, not truly thinking about the message of the piece.
Today, I ran across this tumblr article written in response to the video. And I began to realize all the things that were unsettling about it, or off, or just plain wrong.
Have a read and see what I mean. Sneaky racism, an emphasis on beauty being the most important thing to a woman's life... It's kind of sad, in a way. In the end, Dove is trying to sell a product, and these videos reinforce that message. It's just too bad that they want to wrap that advertising in a feel-good message that isn't nearly as wholesome as they'd have you believe.
This is their latest video, Real Beauty Sketches. It focuses on women being sketched by a forensic artist who cannot see them as they explain their looks, and then another portrait being done of them by people who they've just met. It's supposed to show the difference between your perceived looks and the way other people see you.
I'll admit, I got kind of teary-eyed when I watched it for the first time. The people responsible for editing, production and soundtrack all hit it on the mark and it's a beautiful piece of filming. Then I went about my merry way, not truly thinking about the message of the piece.
Today, I ran across this tumblr article written in response to the video. And I began to realize all the things that were unsettling about it, or off, or just plain wrong.
Have a read and see what I mean. Sneaky racism, an emphasis on beauty being the most important thing to a woman's life... It's kind of sad, in a way. In the end, Dove is trying to sell a product, and these videos reinforce that message. It's just too bad that they want to wrap that advertising in a feel-good message that isn't nearly as wholesome as they'd have you believe.
Comment