Have you seen the commercial for the birth control pill ORTHO TRI-CYCLEN LO. (If not, you can watch it here.)
The commercial depicts beautifully lit, attractive women walking around pretty settings in slow motion. Underneath the narration about the pill's effects and side-effects, a pixie woman sings a the main hook from "There She Goes" (originally by The La's.)
"There she goes. There she goes again."
The song and the visuals artfully deliver a clear, pro-woman, pro-sex message ("There she goes, having premarital sex and not getting pregnant. Hey, check it out, there she goes again!), but in a way that slides past the literal-minded Virginity Cultists who'd bury the FCC under a mountain of auto-generated e-mails if a commercial spokesperson stood in front of a camera and said, "Hey, young women, this drug makes sex more fun and less risky."
Maybe this commercial is a glimpse at the potential upside of the ascendant Christian Conservative movement's censorship movement. To get messages out, creative people are going to have to be more artful. Maybe the crackdown on so-called broadcast indecency is, as we speak, birthing a dozen new Cole Porters. We can only hope.
4 comments:
A quick comment - while the musical tag is indeed from a song written by The La's, the sample of the song used in the commercial IS NOT from The La's version. It's from the mediocre remake by Sixpence None The Richer (better known as the group who wrote the late-90's teen anthem, "Kiss Me.") This is doubly ironic since Sixpence was well known to Christian conservatives (if not the general public) as a "Christian Pop" group. But this only strengthens Andy's point - it does seem as if the drug company used every means at their disposal to throw the Christian bloodhounds off the trail. (And no, that wasn't a menstruation reference.)
-Heeby McJewison
I didn't express that clearly. I know it's not The La's. I should have thrown the word "originally" in there. In fact, I'll do that now.
I have more of a problem with the wilting, prancing flower-girl pixie woman that's supposedly embodying my sexual freedom. Pro-woman is a traipsing thing with a bouncy ponytail? What is that little twirl thing it does at the end?
I'm happy that they are still allowing contraceptive commercials on TV, but the unfortunate effect of all that fluffery and artful imagery, in combination with the billion and one repressive abstinence messages everywhere, is actually kind of anti-woman. It's glamorizing a pretty mundane part of hetero women's lives at a time when contraception itself is under attack by said Christian Conservatives. It's just more fuel for their righteous fire.
I wish contraception commercials were treated more like headache commercials...
Tri-Cyclen Reason Number 304545: Tyler Swanson, your next-door-neighbor.
Tri-Cyclen: Fast, Long-lasting. Able to beat tough sperm.
...but the fact is that all "personal care" products marketed to women have that same, stupid slant, which usually involves a field of flowers and silk clothing. Blech.
the thing about this commercial, is that its not even teens that are depicted, the 'actors' are most likely older then 18, so 'teen sex' is not really the issue, the other (and better in my opinion) commercial for Tri-cyclen-lo does depict 'teen girls' who may or may not be thinking of having sex, but in no way does the commercial say anthing like "HEY GO HAVE SEX AS SOON AS YOU POSSIBLY CAN" and it is in fact a very mature commercial in my opinion. Teens are GOING to have sex (i sohuld know, i am one myself and im on the pill, and im having sex) so why not promote safe sex practices?
P.S: I live in canada, toronto to be exact, so i'm not even sure if this commercial is shown in america or anywhere else... but bascially it shows different girls doing things that have to do with the voice over, and the voice over says things like, 'try being nice, try being bad, try being good, try doing something different, etc....
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