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Dove Ad Casts Spotlight On Madison Avenue Racism

First Posted: 05/25/11 02:51 PM ET Updated: 05/26/11 10:20 AM ET

Dove

When people ask Eugene Morris why he left a virtually all-white advertising firm in the early 1970s for an African-American one, he tells them about the time he asked a white higher-up for an overdue raise.

"He started telling me about how well-dressed I was," Morris recalled. "He told me that I had a nice sports car, which I did, and he told me that he knew that I had a very nice apartment. He started naming all these things, these possessions of mine, and he said, 'Aren't you making enough money?' I thought the next thing he was going to say was, 'Well what more would a 'mmmm' want?'"

Incidents like these added up, Morris said, and after a while he decided he'd had enough, as did many other young black executives who left the advertising world after an initial surge of racially progressive hiring in the late '60s and early '70s.

Morris cited this incident recently to illustrate one of the reasons why the racial make-up of the mainstream advertising business still looks much as it did in the early '70s, which is to say, predominantly white.

"When I first came into the business, if I had projected forty years into the future," said Morris, "I never would have described the current situation, where African-Americans are still in the single digits in all these agencies."

For all too obvious reasons, the dearth of black executives in advertising doesn't normally receive much attention from the mainstream media, but a controversial Dove body wash ad cast the issue into the spotlight this week. Supposedly an attempt to present Dove as a company that values cultural diversity, many believe that the ad fell astoundingly short.

It shows a black woman, a white woman, and an olive-skinned woman, possibly Latina, standing side by side -- a tableau of racial harmony. What's offensive is what's behind them: a pair of skin close-ups with "before" and "after" titles positioned so that it looks like they're referring to the black and white woman, respectively.

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As Copyranter, the blog that caused an stir on the Internet earlier this week by posting the ad, noted, it's as though the ad is pitching a product that "turns Black Women into Latino Women into White Women."

The blog Styleite reached a similar conclusion, writing, "Visually, it communicates that if you have dark skin before you use VisibleCare, you'll have pale skin afterward." Noting another salient difference between the black model and white one, Styleite added, "You'll also be thinner."

In a press statement, Unilever, the company that makes Dove products, said that all three women were "intended to demonstrate the 'after' product benefit" and added, "We do not condone any activity or imagery that intentionally insults any audience."

What's most significant about the ad -- and most embarrassing to Unilever -- is that no one at the company seems to have anticipated that people would find it offensive. And that speaks to a larger issue, one that the activist and former magazine editor Michaela Angela Davis framed like this: "When it comes to advertising, it's not enough to just have a black woman in the room. She has to be in the boardroom -- she can't just be in the changing room."

The lack of black women, and men, in Madison Avenue's boardrooms is a problem that the attorney Cyrus Mehri hopes to publicize. Two years ago, his firm, Mehri and Skalet, partnered with the NAACP to create the Madison Avenue Project, an initiative aimed at increasing the ranks of blacks and Latinos in advertising. A report released by the group in 2009 showed that black college graduates working in the business earn 80 cents for every dollar earned by whites with the same qualifications. Based on a survey of the various pools from which advertising firms traditionally draw talent, the study's authors also concluded that the industry had under-hired blacks by an order of 7,200 jobs.

Responding to the Dove ad, Mehri said, "I don't see how an African-American woman would not be offended by this ad, and I think it's indicative of an industry that still resembles the 'Mad Men' you see on TV. They have not evolved or progressed from the 1960s."

Last year, the Madison Avenue Project commissioned an analysis of the ads shown during the 2010 Super Bowl. Of the 76 creative directors responsible for selling beer, cars and other products to the game's 106 million viewers, 70 were white men and five were white women. The only non-white creative director, Joelle De Jesus, whose "House Rules" commercial for Doritos was one of the few ads to show a non-white character, was actually an amateur who'd scored the spot by winning a contest.

As it happens, Unilever was one of the advertisers in that line-up; a commercial called "Manthem," which hawked Dove's product line for men, culminated with a shot of the white male protagonist dancing on the shoulders of a black man.

Asked why advertising firms don't hire more blacks, Mehri said, "They don't believe that blacks can market to the mainstream." Morris, who is now the head of E. Morris Communications, an agency that specializes in advertising to black customers and, incidentally, has lost business recently as companies looking to cut corners reassign their black-oriented campaigns to the general-market firms that handle their other accounts, said, "I would say that it would make more sense, when you think about it, that African Americans would be better at creating general assignment advertising for whites than whites would be at creating advertising for blacks. There's no way I can survive in this world if I don't understand white people, whereas white people can basically survive without ever having a meaningful interaction with a black person."

Both "Manthem" and the Dove body wash ad that offended so many people this week were produced by the advertising and public relations giant Ogilvy & Mather. When it comes to hiring non-white executives, Ogilvy's record is "very, very poor," said Mehri. "They have very few, if any, minority creative directors."

Ogilvy did not respond to a request for comment. WPP, the holding company that owns Ogilvy, referred an additional request back to Ogilvy.

One of the ironies of the Dove body wash ad is that Unilever has gone out of its way in recent years to lure in customers with the message that, to quote from its recent press release, "real beauty comes in many shapes, sizes, colors and ages."

In 2004, the company launched what it called the Dove Campaign for Real Beauty, a parade of ads that featured "normal-looking" women of varying shape and size and ethnicity (all of them beautiful).

Gwen Sharp, a sociologist who co-writes the blog Sociological Images, said, "It always shocks me when you have companies that I know spend enormous amount of money on their ad or their focus groups, and in the best case don't catch, and in the worst case don't care, about the cultural undertones that their ads play into."

She pointed out that Unilever also makes Fair & Lovely, a skin cream marketed to women in India that, if its advertising is to be believed, can actually make you white.

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When people ask Eugene Morris why he left a virtually all-white advertising firm in the early 1970s for an African-American one, he tells them about the time he asked a white higher-up for an overdue ...
When people ask Eugene Morris why he left a virtually all-white advertising firm in the early 1970s for an African-American one, he tells them about the time he asked a white higher-up for an overdue ...
 
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28 minutes ago (3:02 PM)
This ad is racist although it's racism is completely innocent. As a creative director this is a mistake, a mistake made because the creative directors involved did not have the critical eye necessary to catch the error. I don't think that it was anyone's intention to be racist. But this error speaks to the larger context of the article, not enough people of color are put in positions where their point of view is honored. If there was one black person on this creative team with enough of a voice to make an impact, the error would have been detected and the concept could have been adjusted.
Atxish
If life gives you melons, you might be dyslexic.
12:21 PM on 6/14/2011
As a black woman, I don't find the Dove ad racist at all. IMO, the frames they have up behind the women, look to be exactly the same color. When I saw the ad, it didn't enter my mind that they were trying to lighten a black woman's skin (or make her think she would look thinner -- *eye roll*). It looked like a picture of scaly, drier skin compared to moisturize­d skin after using their product.

I wonder if Dove had not used a black woman in the ad would this be a controvers­y? Would Latino's or "olive skinned" people be in such an uproar if it were just the other two women? Because a black woman was in the ad in the first place was a big accomplish­ment. Again, my opinion. I was happy to see someone NOT fair-skinn­ed and skinny representi­ng black women.
10:57 AM on 6/02/2011
Don't get the stupid art direction comments, and certainly IMO don't believe there to be subtle racism here. I suspect the order of the woman was based on the outcome of the photograph­y session, and selecting the best picture.
12:31 PM on 5/28/2011
A definite OOPS moment. But I don't think it was intentiona­l or racist. They've been trying so hard to be inclusive. Still, I think Dove will be having de rigueur focus groups on any ad scheduled for public consumptio­n in the near future.
05:53 PM on 5/27/2011
I just see 3 hot women in towels....­but i guess these ads aren't geared towards my demographi­c...
01:42 AM on 5/28/2011
You naughty boy! If 3 hot women in towels captivated your eyeballs and 30 seconds of your life then that's what advertisin­g is all about. Your perception is not inaccurate­. Nor is what I see as a woman of color.
04:16 PM on 5/27/2011
What unwarrante­d sensationa­lism. The ad doesn't reflect what the article suggests. The skin is not lighter colored in the after shot; it shows skin that has been moisturize­d and has less noticeable chalky lines.
01:43 AM on 5/28/2011
That's what you see. Others see differentl­y.
Atxish
If life gives you melons, you might be dyslexic.
12:46 PM on 6/14/2011
THANK YOU! That's EXACTLY what I saw!
12:51 PM on 5/27/2011
I'm a person who sees conspiracy theories in most parts of life, and I didn't catch the alleged racism in this ad. Like others said, I saw two skin patches in the background (one "ashy" or lacking moisture and the other healthier with more moisture), and I saw three beautiful women in the foreground wearing towels.

Yes, there's still racism in the world, but this shouldn't even be on anyone's radar as racism.

I wonder if the left to right order of the three women were re-ordered or reversed would the alleged racism be the same. Hmmmm.
There are more important things in life to worry about; hell, there's even bigger racial, socioecono­mic, political, etc. issues to worry about than this.
10:39 AM on 5/27/2011
Thanks Weird,

I didn't even catch that one. A shameful practice.
12:31 AM on 5/27/2011
I see three beautiful women, with the one on the left rocking that towel like a super model. The one on the far right, while pretty, is shaped like a rectangle.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Theophrastus
Stuck in the orgone chamber, again...
11:02 PM on 5/26/2011
I'm looking at the picture and I see three women. The Hispanic one is in the middle. If they were pop stars the one in the middle (the HISPANIC one) would be top diva. Even the skin tone in the background looks like it came from a Hispanic. How is this racist again?
08:40 PM on 5/26/2011
People who see racism in this ad are making it up or just not too bright. The before and after is how a woman's skin looks after she uses the product and that is represente­d by the magnified patches of skin in the background­. Dove is trying to represent all women by using an African American woman, an Hispanic woman and a white woman.
04:51 PM on 5/29/2011
How about taking people's word for it when it comes to their own perception­s and experience­s? You don't have to agree. Perhaps YOU suffer from some blindness that you weren't aware of? Or maybe YOU're just not too bright.
08:07 PM on 5/26/2011
I am a dark, smooth skinned Black Woman. I am so happy to be this Black Woman, Unlike caucasian or other lighter skinned women, I do not need to sit in the sun slathered in Crisco to get darker. God Graced me with this beautiful skin I have. But....I always find it literally funny how white women and other light skinned women but mostly white women, will do all they can do under the sun or tanning lamp to get as BLACK AS THEY CAN...but have a dislike/di­sdain for women of the darker persuasion­. They don't like Black People but want our skin color??? I am confused..­..
08:53 PM on 5/26/2011
I'm a white woman who sees beauty in all skin colors.
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liberalbug
do you want fries with that?
09:04 PM on 5/26/2011
Get back to trolling some more thee in your mom's basement, Ricky Bobby. post might as well read:

"I am an unempowere­d white man. I do not like black women or blacks for that matter, so I am going to get on the HP tonight under a newly created profile and do some race baiting."

Don't you have an x-box or something else to keep you entertaine­d?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Theophrastus
Stuck in the orgone chamber, again...
10:00 AM on 5/27/2011
There's a very simple explanatio­n; brown skin just looks healthier. Even in the Bible in 1 Samuel 19:12 we find that David's tan and sun bleached hair were considered to be attractive traits way back when the Hebrews first wrote the passage. Yet, in nations where there is a lot of cold and a lot of of snow, or countries where there are office jobs where you work under those ugly pale blue-green florescent lights all day, there is a desire to look like those who, often in the eyes of those stuck behind desks, are "fortunate­" enough to work outside. The grass is always greener on the other side of the fence. Yet, in cultures where there is not a large middle class and the majority are farmers and laborers, people will try to set themselves apart by trying to look like those who are "fortunate­" enough to have those office jobs. That is because in their culture's the palace has been replaced by the skyscraper­, the scribes by accountant­s, and there are few colonialis­ts left to exploit this viewpoint which has existed since time immemorial­. Then there's another, simpler explanatio­n. White people want to look brown because brown people are cool.
06:08 PM on 5/26/2011
So you spoke to the creatives who were responsibl­e for creating this ad, Mr. Knafo? Because, believe it or not, faceless ad agencies aren't responsibl­e for creating ads. Hardworkin­g individual­s are. And I would be sincerely surprised to learn that the two, or three, people who concepted this ad actually thought, "Hey, let's come up with a racist ad for one of our biggest clients!"

Not logical, is it? Neither is it logical to think that a company like Unilever or a product like Dove, which has purposeful­ly created a campaign that embraces women of all ethnicitie­s and sizes, would purposeful­ly create a racist ad.

Anyone can take issue with virtually any ad that's produced—t­hat's a fact. And from where I sit, the only thing embarrassi­ng about this whole thing is that so many people are so willing to find ill will where there is none.

Is the ad racist? No. Can someone find racism in it if they wanted to? Sure. Just like someone can find ignorance in an article published by a respected website like Huffington Post. Of course, just because someone deems something ignorant doesn't make it so. But, then, by your logic, I suppose it does.
08:54 PM on 5/26/2011
Great post.
11:44 AM on 5/27/2011
I agree.
01:58 AM on 5/28/2011
Wait a minute. These people may be very hard workers and lovely and open minded people, but people can be ignorant of cultural sensitivit­ies just because it has not been a part of their experience and if they had more diverse voices involved I'm sure they would have listened to that imput. But it wasn't available. Why? Its the lack of those voices that's at the heart of this controvers­ey and that is the problem of the agency's front office. Do you think what you are seeing in this ad -just in terms of a black woman being present -is the way it's always been? Heck naw! It took years of raising these issues for blacks even to appear in these ads. These advertiser­s didn't do this out of largess - black consumers spoke up-and will continue to speak up like other people always have if they get messages that don't please them. It works - because Dove isn't the only product of its kind on the market and they don't want you to go somewhere else for beautifull­y moisturize­d skin.
04:43 PM on 5/26/2011
FYI:: "Latino" can be of any race, but we get the point
09:03 PM on 5/26/2011
Actually, none of us can be any race.

We all belong to one race, the human race, the only race on this earth.

The quicker we stop falling prey to the idea of racial divisions, a concept invented by Victorian men, the better off we will all be.

Different skin tones (amounts of melanin), evolved over thousands of years in different geographic­al regions and have absolutely nothing to do with that perjorativ­e term, "race."

It's like the term "minority,­" as in "I belong to a minority." One might belong to a smaller group, but not a minority group.
03:41 PM on 5/26/2011
Ok.... I didn't get the racism in this Ad. I see three different women with three different skins type. Letting me know that Dove soap is for Everyone. And yes i'm Black. If you are going play the card know when to used it.