Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Dove ad becomes victim of tense racial climate

Company says ‘we got it wrong’ after rebukes spread on social media

- MIKE SNIDER AND CHARISSE JONES

In the current cultural moment, when racial divisions are being rubbed raw by debates over immigratio­n, symbols of the Confederac­y, police violence and the right to protest, soap maker Dove has learned the hard way that even the best intentions can spark a firestorm.

Over the weekend, Dove posted and then removed a three-second video from Facebook because some found it racially insensitiv­e. Dove, a unit of Unilever, said the clip had been conceived as a way to celebrate the beauty in diversity, showing a black woman morphing into a white woman who then transition­s to another woman of color.

Not long after the ad was posted, criticism rushed in. Then a frame grab from the original video, focusing on the black woman taking off a T-shirt to reveal a white woman underneath, spread across social media. The controvers­y shows how the fluid, viral nature of social media can escalate a situation.

“If you take an individual picture out of a longer story ... it can have different meanings,” says Allen Adamson, a branding expert and founder of Brand Simple Consulting, a New York-based consulting firm. “It’s really hard to control and manage your story because anything can be taken out of context, especially in a very polarized marketplac­e.”

Looking at just the images of the first two women, some felt the meaning could be construed to suggest that whiteness represente­d cleanlines­s. But the full video clip, showing the three women, made a different impression on some viewers.

Several online commenters on the Instagram page for The Shade Room, a celebrity news site that had posted the full video early Monday, said they did not see a problem with the Dove clip.

But when Lindsay Ayers, 27, a law student in Chicago-Kent College of Law, saw the imagery of the black and white women, it “appeared to be ... perpetuati­ng the longstandi­ng belief and beauty standard that lighter skin is more beautiful than darker skin, which is wrong and deeply offensive to women of color.”

After seeing the threesecon­d video, Ayers was confused about the messaging. “I am unclear on why the women had to remove their shirts and become someone else,” she said. “Regardless of what Dove was attempting to convey, the consumer received it as blatant racism. They have to take a hard look at their creative process and what their audience expects from them as a business who has branded themselves to be on the forefront of changing beauty standards.”

Dove said in a statement that the video clip “was intended to convey that Dove Body Wash is for every woman and be a celebratio­n of diversity.”

After it began to receive criticism and removed the post on Saturday, Dove said in its statement that “we got it wrong ... This should not have happened and we are re-evaluating our internal processes for creating and approving content to prevent us making this type of mistake in future.” The company declined to comment for this story beyond the statement.

 ?? SAJJAD HUSSAIN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Over the weekend, Dove posted and then removed a 3-second video from Facebook because some found it racially insensitiv­e.
SAJJAD HUSSAIN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Over the weekend, Dove posted and then removed a 3-second video from Facebook because some found it racially insensitiv­e.

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