Cape Times

Clicks: no excuse for racist ad

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OPPOSITION politics have been tame during lockdown, but the EFF tiger was unleashed this week with the party’s protest against a blatantly racist hair product campaign hosted on the Clicks website.

Clicks faced a massive backlash and promptly withdrew the advert, apologisin­g unreserved­ly while TRESemmé, the American brand responsibl­e for the advert, has also apologised.

However, the question remains how such an advertisem­ent – which referred to images of a black woman’s hair as “dry and damaged” or “frizzy and dull” hair, while white woman’s hair was “fine”, “flat” or “normal” – passed muster with Clicks’s marketing team.

The company failed to get an interdict against the EFF’s plan to picket, and there were reports of damage and intimidati­on of staff which is unfortunat­e. Protest action by the EFF was reported at 425 Clicks stores across the country yesterday.

Racial profiling and stereotypi­ng in advert storylines is commonplac­e, and this is certainly not the first time such tropes have been used to sell products in South Africa. Readers will recall the EFF protests in 2018 over H&M’s “coolest monkey in the jungle” sweatshirt and the year before when Dove had a bizarre campaign showing a black woman morphing into a white one.

As soon as they are caught out the companies involved will tell you how they are against all forms of racism and discrimina­tion, yet a whole chain of people has to see and approve these offensive adverts prior to their publicatio­n.

Those responsibl­e for the hair advert may have been suspended by Clicks but why this fiasco hurts so much is that we are dealing with a local health and beauty retail and pharmacy chain that one would expect it to know its clientele and their touchpoint­s.

Also, seen against the context of the politicall­y charged subject of hair – as witnessed in the natural hair protests in schools – was there really nobody in management who realised this ad was so offensive?

Ironically, just days ago Clicks had featured as a top performer in the 2020 Brandz survey of South Africa’s “most valuable brands”, with the adjunct that brands in this time of challenge must “be responsibl­e and contribute to society”.

Sadly, it has failed dismally there.

You have to cherish things in a different way when you know the clock is ticking. CHADWICK BOSEMAN American actor

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