Body spray ads amuse, but do they offend, too?
By Sam McManis
Sacramento Bee
November 6, 2007
So, as they're making their
way through a Sacramento-area Target, the young women
pass the deodorant aisle and see a display for Axe body
spray – that scent of choice for advertising-susceptible
guys.
And suddenly, Oneika Richardson and her friends are
overcome by a need to dance provocatively and to intone
that cheesy '70s porn-movie guitar riff – Bom Chicka Wah
Wah – featured in the Axe TV commercials.
Then they dissolve into laughter and eye-rolling.
No, these women – students at Sac State – haven't been
overcome by the manly Axe aroma. Nor are they making a
feminist statement denouncing what many say are sexist
and degrading images.
"I just find the ads cute and cheeky, honestly," says
Richardson, who co-hosts a podcast on sex and
relationships for the school newspaper's Web site.
Yet, Richardson recognizes what critics and consumer
watchdogs are calling the gender exploitation inherent
in Axe's series of commercials and Internet ads, with
its slogan "Nice girls turn naughty."
Richardson is, after all, a women's studies minor.
Then again ...
"The first time I saw them, I immediately laughed," she
admits, almost sheepishly.
That's the thing about this advertising campaign: The
ads can offend and entertain in equal measure.
But in the past three years, they've also been seen as
proof by many that American advertising has pushed the
envelope to the breaking point.
Just last month, the consumer watchdog group Campaign
for a Commercial-Free Childhood began a letter-writing
push to Axe's parent company, Unilever, accusing it of
sexism and hypocrisy.
The former charge, of course, is easy to grasp, as the
ads show women as little more than pheromone freaks.
The hypocrisy charge comes because Unilever is also the
parent company of Dove, whose latest ad in its "Campaign
for Real Beauty" upbraids sexploitation in advertising
and tells parents to "Talk to your daughter before the
beauty industry does."
Unilever catches ire
Susan Linn, director of the consumer group and a
professor at Harvard Medical School, says the
letter-writing effort has spawned more than 2,000
e-mails to Unilever executives.
"Unilever needs to have a consistent policy on how it
treats women," Linn says by phone from Cambridge, Mass.
"Either treat them the Dove way or the Axe way. Unilever
has dismissed it as just a joke. But, in fact,
advertising images have a powerful effect, even if
people don't realize it. Especially if they don't
realize it."
In response to e-mailed questions from The Bee, a
statement from the company says that the ads are
developed for comedic value and are "not meant to be
taken literally."
"The lighthearted humor behind our ads appeals to the
guys who use Axe – and, in many cases, to the women in
their lives, as well," the statement says. "We regularly
test elements of our Axe campaign with young women, who
share with us that they see these ads as clever. They
get the joke."
In any case, this much is certain: The commercials are
helping sell tons of pungent deodorant. According to
industry publication Brand Week, Axe had $71 million in
sales in 2006 – $50 million more than its nearest rival,
Tag.
And consumers are definitely aware of the product.
"I teach one media class of 140 (students)," says
California State University, Sacramento instructor Timi
Ross Poeppelman. "And every single one of them knows
these ads, whether they like them or not. On that level,
the ads work, regardless of what we think of them."
That said, there is a long history in advertising of
using sex to sell products. (See chart on Page E1.) Hai
Karate cologne spots in the 1960s were a tamer precursor
to the Axe commercials. And, more recently, the Miller
Lite ad featuring scantily clad women wrestling in a
fountain over whether the beer's best feature was its
"great taste" or whether it was "less filling" ushered
in a new era of explicitness.
Axe changes focus
But Axe has been in the crosshairs of critics who see a
rapid increase in sex and sexism in advertising.
Sexism charges aside, Axe's approach is widely perceived
as a marketing success, says Bruce Vanden Burgh, a
Michigan State University professor who specializes in
advertising.
"The kids I teach are the target market for this
product, and I think (Axe) has got them, dead on,"
Vanden Burgh says. "This is a very edgy generation when
it comes to sex – very out there. It's different than
previous generations, where there was more upfront
feminism. So, the ads mirror their attitudes."
If that's true, then ours is a culture verging on
hedonism and an increasing objectification of women.
Consider: One of the first – and most-viewed Axe ads
(according to YouTube downloads) – features bikini-clad
women, hundreds of them, racing over hill and dale,
swimming treacherous waters and elbowing each other with
feral grimaces to converge on a guy spraying Axe on his
torso on the beach.
Another features an Axe- wearing man and a woman kissing
on a cliff. They roll down the hill, still in an
embrace, over a picnic table, through a greasy auto shop
and then through a tomato patch (where a sexy female
crop-picker joins the couple) until they land in an
ocean of Axe. The kicker: "How Dirty Boys Get Clean."
Lately, Axe has changed its focus from 30-second TV
spots to long-form and "embedded" advertising in the MTV
show "The Gamekillers."
To pitch its "Vice" deodorant product, for instance, Axe
three months ago shot a six-minute mock news documentary
called "Scared Sweet," in which women under the
influence of Axe are "rehabilitated" in prison.
Considerable sexual innuendo ensues, of course.
And the brand's latest viral Web site is a
consumer-generated "World's Dirtiest Film" contest.
College-age filmmakers are urged to digitally capture
girls "getting dirty" – example: bikini-clad women
rolling and fighting in chocolate – to win prizes.
Guys' views mixed, too
But when it comes to fostering cross-gender
understanding, Poeppelman doesn't think much of the Axe
campaign.
"They are degrading to both sexes," she says. "It's
interesting how accepting we are of a female being
objectified as a sex object. If you reversed that and
had men acting like the (Axe) women do, people would say
it's horrible."
Certainly, in a recent letter to the University of
California, Davis' paper, the Aggie, student Annie
Pierpoint wrote in reaction to Axe's marketing on
campus: "While spraying Axe everywhere may get you girls
in fantasyland, let me give advice to the real men
living in the real world: Be classy, respectful,
attentive and honest, and you soon will find yourself
surrounded by real women."
So, what do young men think of the ads?
"I agree with the protests," says Mikhail Chernyavsky,
who writes a sex column for the Hornet, Sac State's
newspaper. "It's presenting sexuality in only an
animalistic view. And any educated individual is smart
enough to know this is just a marketing ploy."
And yet ...
"Every (college) guy, if they put effort into how they
look in the morning, will have Axe be another product in
their basket of hair shampoos, conditioners and gel," he
acknowledges.
But, as Michigan State's Vanden Burgh asks, "Just
because the ads work, is it ethical and moral?
"When I first came here (to teach) in the '70s, everyone
was concerned about the social effects of advertising.
Ask the same question to students now, and the response
is, 'If it works, use it.' But you have to ask yourself,
'How far can they take this?' "
Indeed, industry experts concede that U.S. advertising
has gotten considerably racier in recent years – though
it still lags behind Europe, where nudity in ads is
widely tolerated and not necessarily salacious.
But how far can the envelope be pushed before it
explodes?
"That's a good question," Poeppelman says. "In the '50s,
we didn't want to see Elvis' hips on TV. And now we've
got Axe. It's like a train wreck, watching these
commercials. On the one hand, they're well done and you
can't take your eyes off of them. On the other hand,
you're thinking, 'This is disgusting.' "
