Funny mershal. Would've been better if she'd casually worked the word "vagina" in there, though.
Like those Cialis ads with the couple sitting in his 'n hers bathtubs at the end of a pier, watching the sun set or something at least as asininely demented as that image is, which would be even more effective if the narrator talking about 4+ hour erections, loose stools and the rest of it had managed to work in the term "dong" once or twice...
I don't know what's wrong with these people. Really, don't they know how to REACH an audience?
wv: "ablact" -- That stupid insurance company duck, attempting to play the race card.
Parody or not, that ad was absurd. If that's the kind of work Kotex's ad agency does, I'm imagining what they'd do with an ad containing the word "vagina", and it isn't pretty.
My favorite personal protection ad of all time was a print ad with an attractive young girl in some tiny hiking shorts leading the way up a steep cliff with a handsome young man on her tail, head slightly turned, with the biggest shit eating grin you would ever want to see.
That ad must be at least 30 years old and still makes me laugh when I think about it.
It's always about female genitalia here at Althouse. She evades the really important questions, such as why can't Trojan-brand condoms commercials can't say cock.
I often find visuals more disconcerting than words. The Tampax ad representing "mother nature's monthly gift" as a sliding little red package tied with red ribbons gives me the creeps. Way too visceral.
We live in a country where a movie showing two adults having consensual sex is considered pornographic, and a movie showing someone being shot and dismembered isn't.
Remember "Feminine deodorant spray?" I accidentally used it for deodorant one morning and smelled like "Spring Rain" all day (It really lasted all day, too.)
Too funny...! Every once in awhile I overhear the ladies talking about the latest incident of failure to properly stow the string attached to the "Pearl" while wearing a bikini.
Too bad we have to couch the "period" in terms such as "Aunt Flo(w)" like the men and other women can't figure it out the condition on their own. Humor is the answer in dealing with this but then takes away the seriousness of the view that being female is a disorder to feminists.
I remember my then young son (and young girlfriend) squirm as we watched an ad for jock itch cream during a TV show. I commented to my wife that soon we'd be seeing commercials about 'down there.' She told me that would never happen because some things are sacred. While I whole heartedly agreed with what she said, she was wrong about TV ads.
"An executive for Kimberly-Clark, the owner of Kotex, notes that US TV networks have no such compunction about references to "erectile dysfunction" in prime-time ads for Viagra and Ciallis".
In all fairness, I'm pretty sure the erectile dysfunction drug ads never say "penis" or "down there" either.
...US TV networks have no such compunction about references to "erectile dysfunction" in prime-time ads for Viagra and Ciallis".
But "erectile dysfunction" is a euphemism. (Anything with the word "dysfunction" in it is likely a euphemism.)
Euphemisms end up being euphemized themselves. Though earlier ad writers for tampons and pads took euphemism to such a high level of abstraction and incomprehensibility that for one brief shining era the word almost achieved escape velocity from the thing: I still remember the elaborately evening-gowned woman adorning the whole side of the magazine page, alone in an empty grey space, gaze fixed on infinity, be-captioned "Modess...because". After 45 years I'm still wondering "because...what?"
On late night TV the "sweet young thing" is interviewing Jimmy Johnson asking if extenZe really works. Typing that out - Johnson....
Did you know you can get a week's supply for the price of a postage stamp and it comes with an invitation to dinner with Jimmy Johnson at an extenZe event?
Really?
You'd really want to go to an event and dinner for that?
I loved the ad. As did my wife (a boomer) and my daughter (a Millenial)
who was offended?
(Now this does remind of this: As a kid my mom always made it point to use the "real" word when discussing such things, so as a kid I was comfortable with words like "penis", "vagina". I quickly found out that my friends and their parents were uh.... not so much.
So as an adult and a physician I took the same approach. Sure enough my kids found that using such words was not ok
Anyone else follow the link to the mooncup? It is a cup that replaces tampons. They have a video of how to install it that is kind of interesting. SFW but a bit odd.
They also are having a contest for all the euphemisms for vagina such as lady garden etc.
John Henry www.changeover.com
WV is eques. Does that imply that I am half hung like a horse?
Advertising feminine hygiene products is stupid. On the other hand, watching middle aged men walk around in commercials talking about their erectile dysfunctions is just revolting. There is no shame anymore.
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36 comments:
Don't you just hate petty censorship?
How on earth did this ad ever get on the air?
Whatever happened to "if it bleeds, it leads"?
How on earth did this ad ever get on the air?
For the same reason this used to be aired. It's just a question of which meaning came first.
Funny mershal. Would've been better if she'd casually worked the word "vagina" in there, though.
Like those Cialis ads with the couple sitting in his 'n hers bathtubs at the end of a pier, watching the sun set or something at least as asininely demented as that image is, which would be even more effective if the narrator talking about 4+ hour erections, loose stools and the rest of it had managed to work in the term "dong" once or twice...
I don't know what's wrong with these people. Really, don't they know how to REACH an audience?
wv: "ablact" -- That stupid insurance company duck, attempting to play the race card.
Parody or not, that ad was absurd. If that's the kind of work Kotex's ad agency does, I'm imagining what they'd do with an ad containing the word "vagina", and it isn't pretty.
My favorite personal protection ad of all time was a print ad with an attractive young girl in some tiny hiking shorts leading the way up a steep cliff with a handsome young man on her tail, head slightly turned, with the biggest shit eating grin you would ever want to see.
That ad must be at least 30 years old and still makes me laugh when I think about it.
It's always about female genitalia here at Althouse. She evades the really important questions, such as why can't Trojan-brand condoms commercials can't say cock.
I often find visuals more disconcerting than words. The Tampax ad representing "mother nature's monthly gift" as a sliding little red package tied with red ribbons gives me the creeps. Way too visceral.
Feminine needs aisle.
They rejected the ad because of the cat.
That TV censors anything anymore is a surprise, they say everything else. There may be hope yet.
El Pollo Real said...
Whatever happened to "if it bleeds, it leads"?
Go to your room.
They could say "bearded clam," as that would ... oh wait, that is a tragically obsolete term today :(
Peter
Japanese flag
WV tasing
I have nothing to say but
WV pubigerr
LOL!!!!
I really hate to say this, but...
Look! It's an onion ring with ketchup!
I heard Tina Fey say "douchebag" and a string of other similar words on 30 Rock last night as a joke on what you can say on TV now.
So everyone can say penis. But vagina is a no no?
We live in a country where a movie showing two adults having consensual sex is considered pornographic, and a movie showing someone being shot and dismembered isn't.
This post and its comments are just another reminder that everybody's "privates" are not "private" anymore.
When I saw the headline, I thought the post was about Australia.
Why do you have to be such a f___ing tattle-tale, Scott?
Couldn't they just use a substitute word that would convey the same idea?
Like "Virginia"?
Then all the kids would think it was about taking a vacation.
Remember "Feminine deodorant spray?" I accidentally used it for deodorant one morning and smelled like "Spring Rain" all day (It really lasted all day, too.)
Too funny...! Every once in awhile I overhear the ladies talking about the latest incident of failure to properly stow the string attached to the "Pearl" while wearing a bikini.
Too bad we have to couch the "period" in terms such as "Aunt Flo(w)" like the men and other women can't figure it out the condition on their own. Humor is the answer in dealing with this but then takes away the seriousness of the view that being female is a disorder to feminists.
I remember my then young son (and young girlfriend) squirm as we watched an ad for jock itch cream during a TV show. I commented to my wife that soon we'd be seeing commercials about 'down there.' She told me that would never happen because some things are sacred. While I whole heartedly agreed with what she said, she was wrong about TV ads.
"An executive for Kimberly-Clark, the owner of Kotex, notes that US TV networks have no such compunction about references to "erectile dysfunction" in prime-time ads for Viagra and Ciallis".
In all fairness, I'm pretty sure the erectile dysfunction drug ads never say "penis" or "down there" either.
Erectile dysfunction drug ads never say down there, because they want you to think up about here.
Cuba Gooding Jr. for Cialis
...US TV networks have no such compunction about references to "erectile dysfunction" in prime-time ads for Viagra and Ciallis".
But "erectile dysfunction" is a euphemism. (Anything with the word "dysfunction" in it is likely a euphemism.)
Euphemisms end up being euphemized themselves. Though earlier ad writers for tampons and pads took euphemism to such a high level of abstraction and incomprehensibility that for one brief shining era the word almost achieved escape velocity from the thing: I still remember the elaborately evening-gowned woman adorning the whole side of the magazine page, alone in an empty grey space, gaze fixed on infinity, be-captioned "Modess...because". After 45 years I'm still wondering "because...what?"
Vagina should be seen and not heard.
On late night TV the "sweet young thing" is interviewing Jimmy Johnson asking if extenZe really works. Typing that out - Johnson....
Did you know you can get a week's supply for the price of a postage stamp and it comes with an invitation to dinner with Jimmy Johnson at an extenZe event?
Really?
You'd really want to go to an event and dinner for that?
wv: peterm
I loved the ad. As did my wife (a boomer) and my daughter (a Millenial)
who was offended?
(Now this does remind of this:
As a kid my mom always made it point to use the "real" word when discussing such things, so as a kid I was comfortable with words like "penis", "vagina". I quickly found out that my friends and their parents were uh.... not so much.
So as an adult and a physician I took the same approach. Sure enough my kids found that using such words was not ok
Oh well.
PS
Surely "vagina" is less offensive than
if you have an erection lasting more than four hours call your physician
(though its a great straight line for a whole hosts of responses i.e. "If you have an erection last more than four hours _____________")
Whatever happened to "The mouse's bedtime"?
Anyone else follow the link to the mooncup? It is a cup that replaces tampons. They have a video of how to install it that is kind of interesting. SFW but a bit odd.
They also are having a contest for all the euphemisms for vagina such as lady garden etc.
John Henry
www.changeover.com
WV is eques. Does that imply that I am half hung like a horse?
Advertising feminine hygiene products is stupid. On the other hand, watching middle aged men walk around in commercials talking about their erectile dysfunctions is just revolting. There is no shame anymore.
Hey at least they didn't call 'Gasheesh'.
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