ebonylocs
New Member
Yeah, but the commercial then says "WORKS SO WELL, that it gives you unbelievably luscious hair". The message is clearly that this Rasta guy is not the norm, he's weird and funny - he doesn't want what everybody else, you our valued customer, does.the guy didn't think the straight hair was better, he was pissed that it undid his locs! He wanted his money back! what are y'all talking about??
I think Mwedzi's counter-example of the monk who didn't want the germs killed in the kleenex commercial is on-point and exactly appropriate:
In terms of his wanting his money back, I'd like to offer this commercial:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=znnQCXp2iY8
So the monk at the end was sad that the kleenex kills germs because he values life. But that is the joke for the commercial and in no way negates the fact that they are advertising the germ-killing ability of their product as something desirable and something you (regular non-monk people).
But why do they show it turning his hair straight? Because that's what the viewer is supposed to want. ..they show the outcome that they expect the average viewer will judge most beautiful, the outcome that would make a viewer want to buy their product: straight, shiny, bouncy hair.
They are not just trying to sell this product to blacks obviously and had they not straightened the hair, those who aren't black probably wouldn't understand the main idea. ...After all, they are trying to sell a product, and it is understood as a mainstream brand... purchased mostly by whites.
Yeah, I agree with the above. It's targetted to white people so it shows the kind of hair white people want and approximately have. Also, the average white person doesn't understand locs, think they are unwashable or you can just "wash them out", etc.What a strange little commercial. It misses the bar culturally, but I don't think it was intentionally offensive.
The "I have locs cause I haven't found a a shampoo to make my hair luscious" concept is just odd, but people who are already puzzled by locs might not see anything wrong with it.
So I don't think the intention is to be derisive, even though it is clearly implying that for their target customer straight swinging hair is better than loced. They just don't really give much, if any, thought to the feelings of the people of the culture they are portraying. They are just empty caricatures to be used in marketing situations.
So I don't find it offensive, but I find it mildly annoying because my "cute" Jamaican / Caribbean culture is often used by PR and marketing execs in this way. Not as real people, just colourful product shifters, so I agree with this:
Clearly a commercial created by yet another cocky caucasian for a predomeniently caucasian society.On the surface the commerical is cute and funny. But the sterotypical accent with the locs and Jamacian outfit and showering outdoors to suggest that caribs only shower outdoors.
But at the same time, I know this kind of thing is common in marketing and media. They do it to Germans when selling German cars, to the Swedes when they make it seem like it's all buxom blondes and saunas, etc, etc
BTW: I don't think he's supposed to be bathing in the middle of a playground.
