Toronto Star

Nivea yanks ad ‘White is purity’ following uproar

Public reaction included outrage by those calling slogan racist, and praise by white supremacis­ts

- AMY B. WANG THE WASHINGTON POST

Nivea has pulled a deodorant ad that declared “White Is Purity,” after people protested that the slogan is racist and others hijacked the ad’s online campaign with comments about white supremacy.

The ad, which appeared in a Facebook post last week, originally targeted the German skin care company’s followers in the Middle East. It was intended to promote Nivea’s “Invisible for Black and White” deodorant and depicted the back of a woman’s head with long, wavy, dark hair that tumbled over an all-white outfit.

Underneath the woman’s locks was the slogan in all caps: “WHITE IS PURITY.”

The caption on Nivea’s Facebook post read: “Keep it clean, keep bright. Don’t let anything ruin it, #Invisible.”

The post was quickly condemned by those who saw it as promoting racist rhetoric.

“What the HELL is this? White Purity?” one Twitter user said. “Shame, Shame, Shame on you. Fire your marketing person and anyone who approved this ad.”

Another Twitter user took images of racist comments left on the Facebook post, some referencin­g the Holocaust.

“After realizing that the post is misleading, it was immediatel­y withdrawn. Diversity and equal opportunit­y are crucial values of NIVEA.” NIVEA STATEMENT TO BBC NEWS

“Wow @NiveaUSA. This is horrendous,” the person wrote. “Your comments are FULL of society’s refuse. This cleared your marketing department? #prnightmar­e”

Still others appeared to praise the ad — for the same reasons.

The Daily Mail captured an image of a post by a white supremacis­t group on Nivea’s Facebook page that read, “We enthusiast­ically support this new direction your company is taking. I’m glad we can all agree that #WhiteIsPur­ity.”

“Nivea has chosen our side and the most liked comments are glorious,” another Twitter user said, with an image of the top comments on Nivea’s Facebook post. One showed Pepe the Frog, a meme that in recent years was co-opted by white supremacis­ts and has been declared a hate symbol.

A handful of threads on the anonymous online forum 4chan encouraged people to “LIKE ALL COMMENTS, BUY THEIR PRODUCTS.”

“Is Nivea, dare I say, /our guy/?” one 4chan user wondered, referring to supporters of white supremacis­t groups.

Nivea has since deleted the Facebook post, though images of the ad are still available online. Metro UK reported that the post remained publicly visible over the weekend and was removed Monday after the news outlet inquired about it.

Representa­tives for Nivea’s parent company, Beiersdorf Global, did not immediatel­y respond to an email request for comment Tuesday.

The company individual­ly replied to some people on Twitter who were outraged by the ad.

Nivea UK tweeted: “@benjancewi­cz@plumandmus­tard@NIVEAUSA This was not a @niveauk post, the NIVEA Middle East post was not meant to be offensive. We deeply apologize and it’s been removed.” Nivea USA tweeted: “@maej43@wickdchiq@niveauk The NIVEA Middle East post was not meant to be offensive. We apologize. It’s been removed. NIVEA values diversity and tolerance.”

In a statement to BBC News, the company apologized for the post and said it had been removed after “concerns risen about ethnic discrimina­tion.”

“We are deeply sorry to anyone who may take offence to this specific post,” the statement read. “After realizing that the post is misleading, it was immediatel­y withdrawn. Diversity and equal opportunit­y are crucial values of NIVEA: The brand represents diversity, tolerance, and equal opportunit­y. We value difference. Direct or indirect discrimina­tion must be ruled out in all decisions by, and in all areas of our activities.”

An earlier “invisible” ad declaring that “Black stays black. White stays white.” was still on the Nivea Middle East Facebook page as of Wednesday morning.

Nivea has attracted controvers­y with its marketing campaigns before.

In 2011, an ad for “Nivea for Men” products came under fire for depicting a clean-shaven black man holding a disembodie­d head with an Afro — presumably his former self — and getting ready to toss it away.

The slogan on that ad? “RE-CIVILIZE YOURSELF.”

Adweek noted a correspond­ing ad that showed a white man holding his own disembodie­d head didn’t include the “re-civilize yourself” slogan. Outrage over the campaign forced Nivea to publicly apologize on its Facebook page.

“This ad was inappropri­ate and offensive,” the company’s 2011 apology read. “It was never our intention to offend anyone, and for this we are deeply sorry. This ad will never be used again. Diversity and equal opportunit­y are crucial values of our company.”

 ??  ?? A Nivea ad on Facebook for a new deodorant drew ire for its slogan.
A Nivea ad on Facebook for a new deodorant drew ire for its slogan.

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