xiphias: (Default)
[personal profile] xiphias
I'm assuming I don't have to link to any of Isaiah Mustafah's Old Spice commercials, and that you've seen them all.

First, let me just make the comment on how it's changing my perception of the brand. I thought of Old Spice as the deodorant that my grandfather used.

Now I'm thinking, "Oh, right -- my grandfather killed a bunch of Nazis, didn't he?"

Anyway.

One of my favorite terms to use when doing feminist critiques of media is "agency" -- specifically the agency of women. In the medium, are women active participants or passive prizes?

In the Axe Body Wash commercials, women have no agency. If you (and "you" means "a male" -- the commercials ignore the possibility that half their audience might be female; females don't exist as PEOPLE in those commercials) use Axe, women will flock to you without any free will of their own. Women aren't people; they're prizes.

In the Old Spice commercials, "Ladies: Look at your man. Now look at me. Now look at your man."

It's addressed to women, with the impression that WOMEN are people who can make choices. It's not terribly feminist, yes, but there IS a difference between the commercials for men's deodorant which treat women as props and these, which at least make a nod to the idea that women are people. We can talk about how terribly heteronormative they are, but the fact that they at least acknowledge that women exist as sapient beings is a huge step forward for men's grooming product advertisements.

Completely agree

Date: 2010-07-15 02:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] silvenstar.livejournal.com
I've made my husband use Old Spice since we first moved in together. I love how it smells. So seeing him addressing me makes me happy, since I'm the one that made the decision to smell that every day.

Re: Completely agree

Date: 2010-07-15 02:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] xiphias.livejournal.com
It's interesting, because I didn't even THINK of the obvious fact that, in the majority of male-female households, the women make the purchasing decisions. Which, as you point out, makes it obvious who you should be marketing to.

In our household, I do almost all the shopping, and my wife tends to use either LUSH products or Doc Bronner's, and uses Mennen Speed Stick (not Lady Speed Stick, which she doesn't like as much). So I tend not to think about the gendered nature of shopping, except when advertisement makes it really, really obvious.

Re: Completely agree

Date: 2010-07-15 08:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] silvenstar.livejournal.com
No matter how equal we may become, some gender roles tend to stay the same. The only reason it's still that way in my house is because I do almost all of the cooking, since I'm a stay-at-home-mom.

On a side note, I used to use Secret Powder Fresh, but I recently swapped to a lavender scented one. It's not overpowering like most women's deodorants.

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