Its good to be white.
it's not just india or rest of asia, this also includes south america.
Skin color is an emotive topic.
Many whose skin is white desperately beach themselves for hours and days in order to look, somehow, less bleached. But some whose skin is naturally darker seem to believe, for so many subjective and, sometimes, cultural reasons, that the ideal is for their skin to be lighter. And I am in no way specifically referring to either Michael Jackson or Sammy Sosa here.
However, the emergence of of skin-whitening Facebook app in India, courtesy of Vaseline, has aroused much interest around the world. The headline on the ads for the app carries with it the promise of a more handsome you, a more eligible you. It reads: "Transform your face on Facebook with Vaseline men."
(Credit: Vaseline)
I know that Vaseline products have, for many years, effected many helpful transformations for so many people. Yet, the cultural triggers involved in the creation of this app might offer some dark nuances for the idea of romantic love and everlasting passion.
In India, especially northern India, the app's targeting at men reflects the idea that lighter skin color suggests its owner comes from a higher caste.
The sheer normality of such a notion seems evident, given that this campaign features Bollywood actor Shahid Kapur, who most certainly doesn't look as if he needs to lighten his features in order to attract the attention of his target sex.
The people behind the app claim it is already a huge success. "We started campaign advertising (for the application) from the second week of June and the response has been pretty phenomenal," Pankaj Parihar from ad conglomerate Omnicom told Adelaide Now.
However, I wonder about the real-world application of such an app.
What happens when the lady in question finally meets the man and discovers that he is quite a few shades darker than his profile picture? Does she scream in pain and rush back to the bosom of her friends and family? Does she stand, stare, and then sue? Or has his charming personality come through so much through his Facebook messages that superficiality is tossed to the wind like a Bollywood dance number?
I ask these questions because this skin-lightening thing is not a one-way affair in India.
In the interests of, well, adventure, I went to the Vaseline India site and discovered something that might, to some, vibrate on a scale between sad and macabre. For there was a large ad that played on women's apparent insecurities about the difference in shade that might exist between their faces and their bodies.
"Four out of 5 women believe their body is darker than their face. Are you one of them?" the home page asks, sensitively. It then offers women a solution. Vaseline Healthy White Body Milk. I am fairly confident there is no such product as Vaseline Unhealthy White Body Milk. Or even Vaseline Healthy Black Body Milk.
But who could not be fascinated when the site goes on to suggest that you grab a pack of this healthy product so that you can use its very helpful shade meter? And if you think Vaseline is somehow alone in this pursuit, please check out this lovely ad from 2007:
http://news.cnet.com/8301-17852_3-20010521-71.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-20
Skin color is an emotive topic.
Many whose skin is white desperately beach themselves for hours and days in order to look, somehow, less bleached. But some whose skin is naturally darker seem to believe, for so many subjective and, sometimes, cultural reasons, that the ideal is for their skin to be lighter. And I am in no way specifically referring to either Michael Jackson or Sammy Sosa here.
However, the emergence of of skin-whitening Facebook app in India, courtesy of Vaseline, has aroused much interest around the world. The headline on the ads for the app carries with it the promise of a more handsome you, a more eligible you. It reads: "Transform your face on Facebook with Vaseline men."
(Credit: Vaseline)
I know that Vaseline products have, for many years, effected many helpful transformations for so many people. Yet, the cultural triggers involved in the creation of this app might offer some dark nuances for the idea of romantic love and everlasting passion.
In India, especially northern India, the app's targeting at men reflects the idea that lighter skin color suggests its owner comes from a higher caste.
The sheer normality of such a notion seems evident, given that this campaign features Bollywood actor Shahid Kapur, who most certainly doesn't look as if he needs to lighten his features in order to attract the attention of his target sex.
The people behind the app claim it is already a huge success. "We started campaign advertising (for the application) from the second week of June and the response has been pretty phenomenal," Pankaj Parihar from ad conglomerate Omnicom told Adelaide Now.
However, I wonder about the real-world application of such an app.
What happens when the lady in question finally meets the man and discovers that he is quite a few shades darker than his profile picture? Does she scream in pain and rush back to the bosom of her friends and family? Does she stand, stare, and then sue? Or has his charming personality come through so much through his Facebook messages that superficiality is tossed to the wind like a Bollywood dance number?
I ask these questions because this skin-lightening thing is not a one-way affair in India.
In the interests of, well, adventure, I went to the Vaseline India site and discovered something that might, to some, vibrate on a scale between sad and macabre. For there was a large ad that played on women's apparent insecurities about the difference in shade that might exist between their faces and their bodies.
"Four out of 5 women believe their body is darker than their face. Are you one of them?" the home page asks, sensitively. It then offers women a solution. Vaseline Healthy White Body Milk. I am fairly confident there is no such product as Vaseline Unhealthy White Body Milk. Or even Vaseline Healthy Black Body Milk.
But who could not be fascinated when the site goes on to suggest that you grab a pack of this healthy product so that you can use its very helpful shade meter? And if you think Vaseline is somehow alone in this pursuit, please check out this lovely ad from 2007:
http://news.cnet.com/8301-17852_3-20010521-71.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-20
Comments
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Correct me if I am wrong - wasn't the same discriminatory practice common in China? I seem to remember certain regions of China had a population which had a darker complexion than other regions. The darker skinned folks were looked down upon by the lighter skinned countrymen. Think the same applied in Puerto Rico. Italy. Pick a country - where ignorance (lack of education, lack of opportunities, too much competition for scant jobs, etc.) is prevalent, so is prejudice. Never saw a white millionaire dissing a (fill in a race) millionaire.
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Yeah, ask the Chinese central govt how they feel about Uighurs and other Western China/Muslim areas.
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i did mention in my post they have the same problem all over asia and latin america. china is part of asia.
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Boygabriel wrote: Yeah, ask the Chinese central govt how they feel about Uighurs and other Western China/Muslim areas.
free native americans!!! millions killed by the white man!!!!
at least stick to the freaking issues. thanks. -
I was pointing out how racial preference for lighter skins tones exists all over. It's not a Caucasian thing, as you pointed out. It's an us/vs them thing.
Light skin indians don't want to be Caucasian (aka white), they just want to be light skin b/c of cultural biases against darker skinned people.
They want to be considered upper caste Indians, not caucasian. -
Boygabriel wrote: I was pointing out how racial preference for lighter skins tones exists all over. It's not a Caucasian thing, as you pointed out. It's an us/vs them thing.
no you didn't and free Iroquois confederacy!!
Light skin indians don't want to be Caucasian (aka white), they just want to be light skin b/c of cultural biases against darker skinned people.
They want to be considered upper caste Indians, not caucasian. -
Sorry AW I love you dearly but I do not see what BG did that was wrong. Its seems Domino posted something before him and it looks like he was answering to both posts. If you look at the boards very very few times has BG intervened and the few I can see is mostly because of name calling. Just because he is a MOD does not mean he has to change how he posts here.
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Sorry AW I love you dearly but I do not see what BG did that was wrong. Its seems Domino posted something before him and it looks like he was answering to both posts. If you look at the boards very very few times has BG intervened and the few I can see is mostly because of name calling. Just because he is a MOD does not mean he has to change how he posts here.
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stacey wrote: Sorry AW I love you dearly but I do not see what BG did that was wrong. Its seems Domino posted something before him and it looks like he was answering to both posts. If you look at the boards very very few times has BG intervened and the few I can see is mostly because of name calling. Just because he is a MOD does not mean he has to change how he posts here.
domino mention china and i said china was part of asia. my whole statement covers china, india all of asia and south america. they all have the conquered mentality of white makes things right.
but BG as you would call him, always insert china this and that into all my post that has nothing to do with the topic at hand. it gets quiet annoying after a while. Uighurs issue/muslim has nothing to do with the light skinnedness.
free native americans!! -
light skinnedness and being white is kinda f up. if you have a drop of white blood in south america mostly you're consider white, same goes for middle east. in asia they literally worship the whiteness from using mostly white models to elevating them to god hood almost!!!
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armchair warrior -- and others,
One question: Can you show me how this is relevant to our lives in Brooklyn? It's not that I don't think it is, but I really do think that were you to make this awesome sad fact tangible, it would garner more readers. -
MHA wrote: armchair warrior -- and others,
One question: Can you show me how this is relevant to our lives in Brooklyn? It's not that I don't think it is, but I really do think that were you to make this awesome sad fact tangible, it would garner more readers.
self hate in the minorities communities is still very high, in the black community the lighter shaded guys generally better portray on tv etc... alot of asian females would only date white guys cause they see them as saviors and whiten themselves, asian males would see the white man can do no wrong mostly something to look up to and inspire to. they get eye surgery(not just females) same goes for Hispanics who would see whiten themselves as better. the darker you are the less worth you are. these colonial mentality carry over from the old countries. look at the baseball player he whiten himself to a sicken white pale color. -

i'm sure he is suffering from the same "disease" Micheal Jackson was. Talk about MJ he said it was the disease reason he looks like that, he can't explain away his white kids lol. he could of gotten black guys to donate sperm too and have mix kids. but instead he had some white guy donate. because he can't stand being any shade of dark color. -
thank god africa is mostly spare from this problem until recently they started to sell Micheal Jackson cream.
http://www.amazon.com/Bleaching-Formula-Brighten-Beautiful-Complexion/dp/B000JVD5F2 -
Africa is not mostly spared.
This is a serious problem in Africa and has been for over a century.
Fela Kuti sung about it in the 1970s, and others before him. -
Boygabriel wrote: Africa is not mostly spared.
I haven't seen the whiten creams until recently there. in asia and the america's it been around for a long time now.
This is a serious problem in Africa and has been for over a century.
Fela Kuti sung about it in the 1970s, and others before him. -
the creams have been in Africa since at least the mid 20th century, if not earlier.
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hmm how come they use the name Micheal Jackson cream for the stuff since they been around for so long not just screen lightening cream.
I don't know man, I doubt it is prevalent as say asia or south america. where they promote these creams on all ads from tv to mags etc.... -
I don't know man, I doubt it is prevalent as say asia or south america. where they promote these creams on all ads from tv to mags etc....
I promise you it's advertised in Africa. I've read a lot on the subject of the cultural implications and the relationships between economic and racial classes under colonialism and in the post-colonialism period as it pertains to race and skin tone.
I'm not sure what you're basing your belief on that it's not as prevalent in Africa. -
Boygabriel wrote:
I haven't seen that many mags and stuff from africa. but from a few i was curious to flip though i didn't see any ads like that.I don't know man, I doubt it is prevalent as say asia or south america. where they promote these creams on all ads from tv to mags etc....
I promise you it's advertised in Africa. I've read a lot on the subject of the cultural implications and the relationships between economic and racial classes under colonialism and in the post-colonialism period as it pertains to race and skin tone.
I'm not sure what you're basing your belief on that it's not as prevalent in Africa.
I was curious so if it is that prevalent do they constantly have the whiter is better theme there too?
where is CTK
on this. -
I was curious so if it is that prevalent do they constantly have the whiter is better theme there too?
It's less prevalent today than it was, say, 20 or 40 or 60 years ago, but yes, it is still a huge racial and identity issue.
Any country that was colonized or where white people subjugated another race, usually has this problem.
Here. Africa. Asia. India. All over the world we gave people complexes about their own race and self-worth. It's an ugly ugly legacy.
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