Who says 'like a girl' is an insult? Not this empowering new ad!
Article from Time Magazine
Acting "like a girl" should not be an insult
After today, you’ll probably never use the
phrase “like a girl” in a negative way—intentionally or not—again.
A new video seeks to redefine the phrase “like
a girl,” as something strong and powerful. It’s part of the larger #LikeAGirl
campaign by Always, the feminine hygiene brand owned by Procter & Gamble.
Award-winning filmmaker Lauren Greenfield, who directed the 2012 documentary, Queen
of Versailles, teamed up with Always to illustrate the brand’s mission to
empower females and attack what Always calls a “the self-esteem crisis”
among young girls.
In the video, a cast of men and women of all
ages are asked to describe what they think the phrase “like a girl” means. The
result is troubling. Waving hands and flipping hair, the participants pretend
to run “like a girl” and throw “like a girl.” Everyone—except, notably, the
young girls—demonstrate that “just like a girl” is often perceived as an
insult. Yet the young girls act out athletic and deliberate motions. The others
soon realize their mistake.
Branded female empowerment campaigns are
nothing new: Consider Dove’s “Real Beauty” ads, which
use simple props to show how “real” women feel about themselves. And Pantene has done similar work,
with a focus on dismantling gender stereotypes in the workplace. All of these
ads have gone viral—an advertiser’s dream.
The #LikeAGirl video could follow a similar
path. Either way, it’s worth taking a minute to watch the video to see what
these young girls have to say. After all, as one woman points out in the video,
“I am a girl and that is not something that I should be ashamed of.”
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