Thursday, April 06, 2017

13627: Pure Stupidity From NIVEA.

Campaign reported NIVEA is red-faced over a Facebook post that prompted charges of racism by trumpeting: White Is Purity. The skin care company released the following statement:

“We are deeply sorry to anyone who may take offense to this specific post. After realising that the post is misleading, it was immediately withdrawn.

Diversity and equal opportunity are crucial values of Nivea. The brand represents diversity, tolerance, and equal opportunity.

We value difference. Direct or indirect discrimination must be ruled out in all decisions by, and in all areas of our activities.”

Okey-doke. But this isn’t the first time NIVEA has caught heat for its cultural cluelessness. Just ask Rihanna or any civilized Black man.

Nivea sorry for ‘white is purity’ Facebook ad

By Omar Oakes

Skincare brand Nivea has apologised for running a Facebook ad that ran the tagline “white is purity” and prompted accusations of racism.

The ad, for the Nivea invisible deodorant range, has since been deleted from Facebook.

Nivea, which has 19 million fans on its global Facebook page, was directed to Middle East social media users.

An image of a woman wearing a white bathrobe was accompanied by the tagline “white is purity”. Alongside the image, Nivea posted the message, “Keep it clean, keep bright. Don’t let anything ruin it, #invisible.

In a statement, Nivea’s owners Beiersdorf said it accepted the post was misleading and was immediately withdrawn in response to “concerns” about ethnic discrimination.

It went on to say, “We are deeply sorry to anyone who may take offense to this specific post. After realising that the post is misleading, it was immediately withdrawn.

“Diversity and equal opportunity are crucial values of Nivea. The brand represents diversity, tolerance, and equal opportunity.

“We value difference. Direct or indirect discrimination must be ruled out in all decisions by, and in all areas of our activities.”

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Same problem here as with that tone-deaf Pepsi campaign. If nobody of color is in the room to catch it, then the brand has to pay the price in the end for blindness and stupidity.

Note to clients, by the way:

It's not enough to have That One Diversity Hire in the room. You have to have multiple people of color on an account in order to catch this kind of stupidity.