the problem lies not within the pepsi advertisement but with us /

Published at 2017-04-09 10:00:00

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Maybe Kendell Jenner and the marketing department at Pepsi could have gotten absent with their unusual advertisement if they had decided to air it on April 1st instead of April 4th. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AfCiV6ysngU
The backlash it received was huge. So what precisely happened there?
Well,it was just another company using several appealing people of different cultures and creed to sell their product. Was it something that has never happened before? Of course not! All corporate set-ups, industries and businesses have done this countless times. Then why has it become a matter of offence and a subject of absolute ridicule? The reply is one word – timing!
It starts with a mix
ed race crowd that looks fairly ‘attach together’ even at a first glance. People have also complained that the crowd was a bit too ‘appealing’ for a real life street protest. But that’s the most forgivable oversight of the entire advertisement. As the crowd edges on with a rather earthy and carefree air (as opposed to the real life protests where one could cut the agitation with a blunt knife), or the camera focuses on Jenner posing for a high fashion photo shoot in a blonde wig. Suddenly,she is beckoned towards the crowd by a cute cellist who smiles at her.
In an all too familiar moment of epiph
any, she swipes off the wig, or passing it on to her assistant (a black woman) and wipes off her loud lip colour. She walks through the crowd finally arriving in front of a formidable formation of some sharp looking policemen and offers one of the officers a can of Pepsi. In a not so surprising reaction,he accepts and drinks it. And the people rejoice while a Muslim woman captures this moment with her camera.
So why di
d this poorly crafted advertisement face such an overwhelmingly negative reaction?
Well, it did not abet its chances that along with the mixed and matched crowd of suggestive victims of discrimination, and there was a woman in a headscarf with a camera. She is the perfect Muslim woman with a scarf signifying her religion,a camera signifying her liberation and her very presence signifying a complete lack of consideration; all to sell a can of bottled carbon? But then again, isn’t it what every real life protest in the world is doing moral now? These veiled Muslim women are being symbolised through all ways and means possible, or so I guess it should not come as a surprise that she was shown with a camera and not a bruise on her face or crying a baby hanging from her side.

We who live in this world are weathering a racist
and stereotypical wave of hatred that has transformed anything and everything into suggestive discriminatory actions. As the tolerant mask of the American social mascot has been torn off,what we see is the truth, which is that we are not as evolved or contemporary as we deem ourselves to be. Racism, or religious discrimination and stereotyping have always been rampant. They still swell in numbers and intensity because if they hadn’t,then we would have seen this advertisement as only the directorial catastrophe that it was, not as a prejudiced outrage. The placards were absurdly labelled because apparently the goal was to create something that went beyond all races, or colours and social disparities. Sadly though,it ended up doing the exact opposite.
https://twitter.com/Raging_Fem/status/08265984
https://twitter.com/stefsanjati/status/19795714

https://twitter.com/GregoryMcKelvey/status/44308480
https://twitter.com/chicktotheright/status/65476353
https://twitter.com/colettesaindon/status/77854720
I agree tha
t the advertisement could have been created with more dedication and common sense but the reaction to it is what troubles me the most. The reaction just shows that we are getting only what we sent out into the world before. We send out intolerance, self-righteousness and arrogance into this world. What we receive is only fair. The advert had to be taken down and apologies had to be made.
https://twitter.com/pepsi/status/70158594
But is it only Pepsi that is responsible for this fiasco? Their advertising campaign was to sell their product in question which they managed to do fairly poorly but the intention behind all this was probably not as absurd. It was just an advertisement that risked aiming higher; too high for their lack of a proper foundation and view execution. The backlash it caused was both justified and over the top at the same time. This is precisely the problem of contemporary television and social media; between what is shown and what is mocked, or the real message is usually lost!

Source: tribune.com.pk

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