Washington County Enterprise-Leader

Shampoo Company Could Do More

- Jill Richardson OTHERWORDS COLUMNIST JILL RICHARDSON IS THE AUTHOR OF RECIPE FOR AMERICA: WHY OUR FOOD SYSTEM IS BROKEN AND WHAT WE CAN DO TO FIX IT.

A Pantene commercial that tells women to stop apologizin­g and “Shine Strong” has gone viral. It contrasts scenes of women saying things like “Sorry, can I ask a stupid question?” with snippets of them behaving in an assertive way.

Pantene’s commercial makes a good point, but there are bigger problems holding women back — including the role that beauty products play in our culture. For me, author Laura Kipnis explains it best. “Femininity, at least in its current incarnatio­n, hinges on sustaining an underlying sense of female inadequacy,” she says in her book, The Female Thing: Dirt, Envy, Sex, and Vulnerabil­ity.

“It’s almost as if the female condition hinged on some kind of ontologica­l flaw,” Kipnis writes.

What do we do when we want some pizzazz? We get makeovers, go shopping, get pedicures, or maybe wash our hair with Pantene shampoo. To feel feminine, we first look for problems that mar our personal appearance. If we decide we are perfect just as we are, we lose our connection to feeling feminine.

And where do we get such notions? From other women, beauty magazines, and advertisin­g. Kipnis maps what she calls a “feminine-industrial complex” and says: “Your self-loathing and neurosis are someone else’s target quarterly profits.”

Americans spend well over $ 50 billion per year on cosmetics. Think about the headlines on the beauty magazines you see at grocery checkouts. They say “10 tips to get a flat belly!” or “Get a bikini body in one week,” not “Why you look fabulous as you are.”

Can you imagine the economic impact if all women woke up tomorrow and thought “I look great?” Sales on fake nails, hairspray, mousse, makeup, spray tans, liposuctio­n, Botox and more would come to a crashing halt. But maybe those empowered, confident women would speak up and voice their ideas without apologizin­g for it.

The irony? Ads for products targeted to women perpetuate the very lack of confidence that the new Pantene commercial tells us to fight. As we drive profits for companies like Proctor and Gamble, which makes Pantene, the shame and self-loathing we feel for our bodies is toxic to every part of our lives.

Try going on an advertisin­g diet: Go cold turkey off of fashion magazines, chuck out your TV, and install an ad blocker on your Internet browser. Then gauge how you feel about yourself after some time passes. Connect with ways to feel feminine that don’t imply inherent personal flaws. I find flirting always does the trick for me.

As for Pantene and its Shine Strong ads, the company could do a lot more to further women’s empowermen­t.

Women don’t need to apologize for existing, but they also don’t need to buy a specific brand of shampoo to become empowered.

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