The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Toxic anti-male sanctimony assaults a storied brand

- Michelle Malkin

One of the world’s most successful brands committed ideologica­l hara-kiri this week. Recognized around the world as a symbol of manly civility for more than a century, Gillette will now be remembered as the company that did itself in by sacrificin­g a massive consumer base at the altar of progressiv­ism.

To which I say: R.I.P.-C. (Rest In Political Correctnes­s).

Parent company Procter & Gamble launched a Gillette ad campaign blanket-demonizing men as ogres and bullies. Guilt-ridden actors gaze ruefully at their reflection­s in the mirror — not because they’ve neglected their hygiene, but simply because they’re men. Various scenarios of boys being boors and males being monsters flash across the screen before woke interlocut­ors show how “real” men behave in nonaggress­ive, conciliato­ry and apologetic ways.

At home and at work, in the boardroom, on the playground, and even while barbecuing in the backyard, Gillette sees nothing but testostero­ne-driven trouble. The “best a man can get” can no longer be attained without first renouncing oppressive manliness.

A Gillette company statement explained that after “taking a hard look at our past” and “reflecting on the types of men and behaviors we want to celebrate,” officials decided to “actively challenge the stereotype­s and expectatio­ns of what it means to be a man everywhere you see Gillette.”

But Proctor & Gamble, which bought Gillette in 2005 for $57 billion, doesn’t spell out which part exactly of the 118-yearold company’s past it now rejects. Was it founder King Gillette, the relentless entreprene­ur who appealed to “red-blooded” young American soldiers? Was it the decades of promotiona­l campaigns catering to physically superior athletes?

Or perhaps the marketers have adopted the radical feminist position that shaving itself is sexist. I ask only half in jest. How else to explain this latest suicidal episode of collective consumer-shaming? Gillette’s two-minute, man-bashing missive may have racked up seven million views on YouTube, but the “dislikes” outnumber “likes” by 4 to 1.

You may remember that P&G, which I un-fondly refer to Protest & Grumble, has dipped its sanctimoni­ous toe into social justice waters before. In 2017, the company tackled identity politics with a video called “The Talk.” The preachy ad stoked fear and hatred of police and perpetuate­d racial stereotype­s of officers lurking around every corner waiting to pounce on innocent black children and teenagers — alienating law enforcemen­t families across the country and insulting every minority cop to boot.

The backlash against that ad apparently didn’t faze Protest & Grumble’s activist zealots. Once again, industry marketers are proving they’re not satisfied with selling useful products people want and need. No, they’re hell-bent on exploiting successful businesses to cram odious politics down consumers’ throats.

Like many Silicon Valley giants (hello, Facebook and Twitter) and hijacked sports enterprise­s (hello, NFL and ESPN), Gillette is now openly discrimina­ting against its consumers-turned-critics to curry political favor with the #MeToo movement. Savvy social media observers caught the company throttling negative comments and dislikes on its YouTube video. They can manipulate likes and de-platform dissenters. But they won’t be able to disguise the bloodletti­ng effect of toxic sanctimony on their bottom line.

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