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United States News Title: P&G’s Gillette ad asks men to shave their ‘toxic masculinity’ and a big backlash ensues A 30-year-old tag line selling Gillette razors to men is having its own #MeToo moment, and some of its whiskered target audience and the women behind them are outraged that a big consumer brand stepped outside of grooming. Theres little that bristles men, and many women, like trying to define manhood. Thats just the off-the-news waves that Procter & Gamble Co. was aiming for, its marketing executives said, even while acknowledging the risks of navigating social movements. The Gillette brand that claims its The Best A Man Can Get this week launched a campaign around the sexual harassment movement, and with the idea of toxic masculinity already in the zeitgeist, the ad got plenty of response. Most came in a Twitter uproar and pledged product boycott, though included some observers of all genders saying the timing is right. The ad, created by the brands agency Grey and titled We Believe, opens with audio of news about the #MeToo movement, bullying and uses the hot-button phrase toxic masculinity. A narrator goes on to dispute the notion that boys will be boys, asking, Is this the best a man can get? Is it? We cant hide from it. It has been going on far too long. We cant laugh it off, making the same old excuses. The video is sad and depressing while putting ALL men in a bad light, one Twitter user wrote. Men arent just waking up to bad things that are going on. There have always been good men. Bad ones too, yes, but the same can be said about women. Women also responded: Okay, this #Gillette ad is a little bit schmaltzy and overwrought, but the replies from men who are clearly angry, fragile, and terrified of being criticised or losing their right to live in the past, are proof of how much we need campaigns like this. https://t.co/fSXJkjSgB1 Hazel Hayes (@TheHazelHayes) January 15, 2019 If @Gillette really want to make a change perhaps they could start by looking at their pink Venus range for women that includes names like Passion and Embrace and costs more than the mens ranges for the same thing. Thanks. Caroline Hirons (@CarolineHirons) January 15, 2019 Other brands went for the counter play. Gillette is part of the anti-male SJW movement. Any men who are sick of this can come right on over to us at Bawdy Barber, where we understand how men work and don't try to change them into women. P&G said it has no plans to pull the spot in the face of some negative reaction, The Wall Street Journal reported. We recognize its sparking a lot of passionate dialogue at the same time, its getting people to stop and think about what it means to be our best selves, which is the point of the spot, said Pankaj Bhalla, Gillette brand director for North America. P&G shares were up slightly early Tuesday. The stock is down about 0.8% so far in January, but up over 1% for the past year.
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