Fair and Lovely Skin-Lightening Cream Ad

This Indian ad, for Fair and Lovely Ayurvedic "natural fairness" cream, makes it clear that lighter skin is more beautiful. The woman can't get a job at first; notice how she is also dressed in a sari. After her father gets her some Fair and Lovely, we see the stages of her lightening. She then goes back to the store--now wearing Western-style business clothes, like the women who previously rejected her--and gets a job. She also attracts the attention of a light-skinned man. Next we see her new, glamorous life.



So light skin = modernity = beauty = success at work and in love.

Fair and Lovely also has a line of skin lighteners for men called Menz Active. The Fair and Lovely Foundation also awards college scholarships. And provides career advice.

Here's an interesting video where Indian Americans discuss skin tone and respond to the Fair and Lovely ad:




Random fact: the company that owns Fair and Lovely, Hindustan Unilever, is owned (the majority stake, anyway) by Unilever, owner of brands including Dove and Axe.

Thanks to Chris H. for sending this one in!

.

9 comments:

  Acolyte

April 25, 2008 at 1:53 PM

Amazing peg women's self worth to skin tone on one end and then offer to empower a few of them with scholarships so that you look like a good company!
That's soooooooooooooo lame. They are doing this in Africa too and it's pathetic I tell you!

  Anonymous

April 26, 2008 at 11:26 AM

Truly sad. 2 thoughts.

1) Interesting that in the first ad, they seem to legitimate this as a practice by having her father get it for her and approving of it. Thus, they are saying that this is not women who are leaving their families and becoming modern and western, this is what good Indian women should do.

2) It is interesting that most of the women in the second video are themselves fairly light-skinned and pretty by western standards...

  Anonymous

April 26, 2008 at 1:54 PM

interesting that, while most of the commercial is in a native indian language of some sort, the names "fair and lovely" and "modern beauty company" are in english

  Anonymous

April 26, 2008 at 1:54 PM

interesting that, while most of the commercial is in a native indian language of some sort, the names "fair and lovely" and "modern beauty company" are in english

  Anonymous

April 26, 2008 at 2:11 PM

Anonymous a lot of commercials all over the world have random English words. I have been in Italy, Japan, Germany, and France, and commercials I've seen in all these countries sometimes have English words if they relate to the product. It isn't uncommon by any means.

  Bee

April 27, 2008 at 1:27 AM

This ad is unsettling and I am not sure what to make of it...
I'm interested in what people make of it in the context of other skin 'enhancers' and colouring products. Is it comparable to bronzers/fake tans that are commonly used in the west or the skin bleaching products popular in Japan? Or is it something else entirely like anonymous claims?

  Anonymous

April 27, 2008 at 1:59 AM

A disgusting side effect of capitalism. Whatever is beautiful isn't natural. On Mindanao they've cover their beautiful tan bodies in light powder during beauty pageants, while among white people they pay for cosmetics to darken their skin. Lightening creams for those gifted with natural color, darkening for those that weren't. If you have curly hair, straighten it. If you have straight hair, curl it. If you have light hair, dye it. If you have dark hair, bleach it. What is attractive is the uncommon, the chubby person when most are thin, the thin when most are chubby.
http://newfoundlandnews.blogspot.com/2006/08/whats-exotic-is-erotic.html

  Anonymous

April 28, 2008 at 9:08 PM

The idea that light skin is more beautiful is sadly not a new idea. Generations of women have been trying to lighten their skin because of this idea. Skin color (and the social discrimination that is based on it) is bound up in this giant morass of caste- and community-based prejudices.

The Fair & Lovely ad campaigns are not subtle, and I think that's what is so shocking to readers if this post. A similar, but more subtle, phenomenon occurs in the US, too. Think of all the ad images of black and latina women, and the very limited range of skin colors they have.

-L

  Anonymous

April 28, 2008 at 9:17 PM

I'd like to add that since Fair & Lovely is sold throughout India, it doesn't make sense to say the name in any language other than English (not everyone speaks Hindi.)

I don't think it's random that the phrase 'modern beauty company' is in English. The language is specifically associated with modernity.

-L