but competition over men sells shit!
Aug. 22nd, 2005 01:04 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Nike, if you haven't heard, has started a series of ads where they photograph women's 'troublesome' body parts at angles that make rather small women look rather large. [See the ads: knees, hips, legs, thighs, and butt.]
The Nike campaign is pretty arresting if you see the ads in print. If you ignore the hardbodied youth of the women in these ads (which is hard to do when contrasted with their "MY BUTT IS BIG" talk - what, has no one actually seen a BIG butt?), they're a nice contrast to the over the top femininity of a lot of ads - including the ones Dove's been doing with their whole "Campaign for Real Beauty". Maybe I just like the Nike ads better because the women are more butch, but it also seems less disingenous to sell sporting goods by saying sporting bodies are also beautiful than to sell cellulite cream by talking about inner beauty [unless what you're saying is that my fat cells are pretty?].
That said. If you go to Nike's website and check out the women talking (click on the "What Story Does Your Body Tell?" link; their website sucks at direct linking), there's quite a bit of talk that's... well, catty. As if the message is that we can be tough and competitive, but deep down we're all still girls - which means, apparently, that we're indirect and all the things you were warned about when you read Odd Girl Out.
As if to prove that point, Torrid is making a button that says don't hate me because I'm beautiful; hate me because your boyfriend thinks I am, all pink and pretty-like, too. No matching "or just hate me because I'm a mean-spirited person" button is available.
The Nike campaign is pretty arresting if you see the ads in print. If you ignore the hardbodied youth of the women in these ads (which is hard to do when contrasted with their "MY BUTT IS BIG" talk - what, has no one actually seen a BIG butt?), they're a nice contrast to the over the top femininity of a lot of ads - including the ones Dove's been doing with their whole "Campaign for Real Beauty". Maybe I just like the Nike ads better because the women are more butch, but it also seems less disingenous to sell sporting goods by saying sporting bodies are also beautiful than to sell cellulite cream by talking about inner beauty [unless what you're saying is that my fat cells are pretty?].
That said. If you go to Nike's website and check out the women talking (click on the "What Story Does Your Body Tell?" link; their website sucks at direct linking), there's quite a bit of talk that's... well, catty. As if the message is that we can be tough and competitive, but deep down we're all still girls - which means, apparently, that we're indirect and all the things you were warned about when you read Odd Girl Out.
As if to prove that point, Torrid is making a button that says don't hate me because I'm beautiful; hate me because your boyfriend thinks I am, all pink and pretty-like, too. No matching "or just hate me because I'm a mean-spirited person" button is available.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-08-22 10:49 am (UTC)I mean, WTF?
(no subject)
Date: 2005-08-22 11:49 am (UTC)I fully embrace the teeny bit of shift towards thinking about the body as function over appearance that the ads imply, though.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-08-22 12:13 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-08-22 10:55 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-08-22 11:11 am (UTC)but it also seems less disingenous to sell sporting goods by saying sporting bodies are also beautiful than to sell cellulite cream by talking about inner beauty
Word.
I wish they'd stop using sweat shops. Nike has had great images of women in ads for YEARS but I still can buy any running shoes.