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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

The worst cervical cancer campaign ever...

408 replies

PizzazzRoxyStorma · 18/11/2023 15:13

...well isn't this one special? Hmm

https://x.com/northwestcancer/status/1724378139059503400?s=46&t=FvzNePXGikWIJeOA86F8cg

The worst cervical cancer campaign ever...
OP posts:
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15
greenacrylicpaint · 20/11/2023 17:11

models often don't know what the ad is for they are posting for.

unless it's an obvious clothes label.

BinturongsSmellOfPopcorn · 20/11/2023 17:12

That's a very undiverse set of legs.

UnremarkableBeasts · 20/11/2023 17:15

greenacrylicpaint · 20/11/2023 17:11

models often don't know what the ad is for they are posting for.

unless it's an obvious clothes label.

They’re not models in the conventional sense. Apparently it’s the design team’s legs.

BinturongsSmellOfPopcorn · 20/11/2023 17:16

greenacrylicpaint · 20/11/2023 17:11

models often don't know what the ad is for they are posting for.

unless it's an obvious clothes label.

The legs are apparently those of women who worked on the ad, not models.

UnremarkableBeasts · 20/11/2023 17:18

Tbh, I’m reading that as ‘the budget was too small to get actual models, so we used the design team instead’.

Clabony · 20/11/2023 17:18

Ah thanks for the legs clarification. I thought someone had done an Anthony Gormley. Because this campaign is so batshit nothing would have surprised me.

BinturongsSmellOfPopcorn · 20/11/2023 17:19

And by 'undiverse' I don't just mean colour. They all look young, slim, hairless, and probably with very similar sense of personal style.

IcakethereforeIam · 20/11/2023 17:35

'Gender affirming hysterectomy'!

GoodRobot · 20/11/2023 17:54

NeighbourhoodWatchPotholeDivision · 20/11/2023 17:03

Thank you for the link.

What the photos of North West Cancer Research tell me is that I will need to be young, no older than say 39, and have well formed, slim and hairless legs to attend a cervical smear test. Maybe the female team wanted to show off their legs🤔? Were they coerced? Peer pressured into having their well shaved and creamed legs photographed?

The actual installation is a disgrace. It objectifies women but not just that we are instructed on a large billboard at a busy train station to not "keep'em crossed" in other words, open our legs. For screening (go on!!) and as an innuendo for opening our legs for sex.

It's humiliating and degrading, we are all used to female body parts being used in advertising to sell goodness what but this is a health promotion campaign to encourage us to look after our healthy and prevent us from dying from cancer. Female audiences that have no choice but engage with this installation in a public space are being humiliated and patronised all in public under the male gaze. This will cause more damage than good and women will probably suffer and die as a consequence of this campaign because it will increase the barriers not decrease. The barriers being that it feels quite unpleasant lying on your back, spreading your legs and having painful equipment inserted into your vagina. The procedure naturally makes women feel vulnerable in the moment and we don't want to think of it in the context of sexual innuendo.

The best thing this charity and their agency can do is to apologise. To put their hands up and say sorry we got this completely wrong but we will listen to you. I'm not going to go into the language and erasure of women in the copy even without all that shite, this campaign is outrageous and undermines women's rights and human rights. I am mentioning human rights as health is a human right.

The WHO Constitution (1946) envisages “…the highest attainable standard of health as a fundamental right of every human being.”

Shame on this charity and their campaign. They can still correct this by taking it down now and run a research campaign to understand how to develop campaigns to reduce the barriers women have to accessing cervical cancer screening not embarrass degrade and patronise us. 😡

My young teen dd hates shop mannequins finding them creepy, I bet lots of young girls will feel intimidated by this ad. It's ultimately telling women "OPEN YOUR LEGS" 😬

NeverDropYourMooncup · 20/11/2023 17:56

Clabony · 20/11/2023 16:41

Our campaign was designed by women, led by a woman and it is their legs that feature in the photographs supporting the work

Their not her?

So, somewhere, there are three women designers, working for the same firm, with identical legs to each other, but different skin tones, elegantly slim, long, and uncankled?

Or do they mean that one woman had her perfect legs copied into different skin tones, as some kind of vanity project?

How much did that cost then out of the donations of good people? I really would like to know.

A spokesperson for North West Cancer Research said: 'One in three of the people in the North West who would benefit from a cervical cancer test are not coming forward. The evidence shows that, even with the very best intentions, the existing NHS testing campaigns are not achieving their aims in our region

Neither is this campaign.

Much better ideas on this thread from women who have given this great thought, and for free!

As is already known, male subjects are frequently used for modelling tights and the like because of their longer, arguably aesthetically pleasing legs.

The use of 'their' suggests to me that this is another case where the legs used may not have been those of somebody who would also be in need of cervical screening.

GoodRobot · 20/11/2023 18:05

My young teen dd hates shop mannequins finding them creepy, I bet lots of young girls will feel intimidated by this ad. It's ultimately telling women "SPREAD YOUR LEGS"

BinturongsSmellOfPopcorn · 20/11/2023 18:11

The use of 'their' suggests to me that this is another case where the legs used may not have been those of somebody who would also be in need of cervical screening.

The picture is of more than 1 person's legs, so 'their' is perfectly appropriate.

LoobiJee · 20/11/2023 18:25

UnremarkableBeasts · 20/11/2023 16:51

Our campaign was designed by women, led by a woman and it is their legs that feature in the photographs supporting the work

It’s almost as if they haven’t in any way recognised that the women who designed and led this campaign may not represent all women. And that a lack of awareness about this might be a very big problem.

Let’s face it, the group of women who are quite happy to have their legs photographed and displayed in a sexualised nudge nudge, wink wink advertising campaign under the slogan ‘don’t keep them shut’ represents a pretty small subset of women in the UK who are eligible for the cervical screening programme. Which would be fine if those women showed any awareness that others may feel very differently to them and those different feelings will translate into very different outcomes for the campaign.

Spot on.

Rollingdownland · 20/11/2023 18:53

I'm glad the DM has done the story. This sort of erasure of women needs the widest possible audience so we can stop it before any more harm is done.

RedToothBrush · 20/11/2023 19:01

Let's run a statistical point here.

There's 7.5million people in the NW. That's roughly 3.25million females.

Let's say about a third or 1million are in the eligible age range for the sake of argument by the time you take out children and over 50s.
One third don't go to an appointment for screening. Ok.
That's 333,333 women they are trying to target.

The 2021 census suggests that 0.09% of the NW population in the UK are transmen.
So that's 7,500 transmen according to those numbers (which is total bollocks and vastly overly stating it - cos we know the census was badly flawed, but we'll go with it anyway).

That means that 7500 transmen (a sizeable percentage of whom ARE going for screening and will be too young for screening anyway) are being put before the 325,833 women.

If you get just 2% of those women failing to understand the language due to the omission of the word woman, or 2% of those women who are alienated due to 'using inclusive language', that's nearly the same as the entire population of transmen in the NW. It you alienate half the transmen out there and decrease uptake in that population but manage more than a 1% increase in the non-participating women you will be into net benefit.

If the campaign is all about trying to save as many lives as possible it makes utterly no sense to use that language. Statistically it is just stupid.

Not only that, but if you have a fixation with your body - which being a transman essentially is, I'd say you probably have more of an idea that you are a woman and have a cervix than most. You just are funny about it anyway. And you possibly would simply prefer a discrete service just for transmen - and that would do more to increase uptake than stupid language.

Inclusive language isn't going to deal with trauma though anyway.

I absolutely do not know how inclusive language is beneficial here. It isn't benefiting females. It's benefitting trans ideology - but it's not benefitting females. It's effectively a male benefit.

Now my figures might be way out. But I don't think wildly. I do think it's illustrative enough of how just alienating a small percentage of women in the name of benefitting transmen is utterly crazy though.

WHY is anyone who is supposedly being responsible doing this?

If the number of women in the target group who are alienated is even slightly higher it's running the risk of being a disaster. Why do it?

OceanicBoundlessness · 20/11/2023 19:11

If the number of women in the target group who are alienated is even slightly higher it's running the risk of being a disaster. Why do it?

And the potential is that they're making the target group larger by alienating women who really struggle to go as it is.

NeverDropYourMooncup · 20/11/2023 19:13

BinturongsSmellOfPopcorn · 20/11/2023 18:11

The use of 'their' suggests to me that this is another case where the legs used may not have been those of somebody who would also be in need of cervical screening.

The picture is of more than 1 person's legs, so 'their' is perfectly appropriate.

Looks like the same pair of legs to me, just produced in three colours.

Can't imagine many workplaces have 3 six foot model-calibre female staff members in exactly the same size and the same shape. And in three convenient colourways, too.

NeighbourhoodWatchPotholeDivision · 20/11/2023 19:26

NeverDropYourMooncup · 20/11/2023 19:13

Looks like the same pair of legs to me, just produced in three colours.

Can't imagine many workplaces have 3 six foot model-calibre female staff members in exactly the same size and the same shape. And in three convenient colourways, too.

The sculpture is definitely the same pair of legs in different colourways.

The ad agency is using some totally different sets of legs and their owners as a flimsy excuse to justify its sexually coercive campaign.

These are the legs: archive.li/qcufN

NeighbourhoodWatchPotholeDivision · 20/11/2023 19:35

I think some legs appear twice, so this campaign is allegedly fully endorsed by the grand total of seven women that worked on it.

So that obviously totally outweighs all of us. Dunno why we thought our opinions could possibly matter.

The worst cervical cancer campaign ever...
The worst cervical cancer campaign ever...
The worst cervical cancer campaign ever...
Rightsraptor · 20/11/2023 19:50

And elsewhere:

British Transport Police report that one in three women are sexually harassed on trains.

And these clowns think a rail station is the very place to instruct women to 'open your legs'.

(Apologies if this has already been raised, I haven't read all 16 pages).

NeighbourhoodWatchPotholeDivision · 20/11/2023 20:09

No apologies needed. It was touched on very briefly, but it's not had the thread inches it deserves as a topic.

That strapline was doubtless used as the inspiration for sexual harassment, in the guise of 'banter'. Angry

TrashedSofa · 20/11/2023 20:12

What a shitshow.

IcakethereforeIam · 20/11/2023 20:12

@Rightsraptor that is a very good point. I've not read all the pages either Blush

BinturongsSmellOfPopcorn · 20/11/2023 20:33

NeighbourhoodWatchPotholeDivision · 20/11/2023 19:26

The sculpture is definitely the same pair of legs in different colourways.

The ad agency is using some totally different sets of legs and their owners as a flimsy excuse to justify its sexually coercive campaign.

These are the legs: archive.li/qcufN

The 3D station installation uses generic mannequin legs. They are indeed identical apart from the paint, but are not the ones being referred to as 'their legs' in the quote. The quote is about the photos of legs in other parts of the campaign - which belong to a selection of women who created the ad.

So yes - legs A (photo) are being used to justify legs B (3D model), and indeed the campaign as a whole. But use of 'they' rather than 'she' is correct for legs A.

Helleofabore · 20/11/2023 23:38

”If the number of women in the target group who are alienated is even slightly higher it's running the risk of being a disaster. Why do it?”

Apparently because some people have a very low bar of ‘if this saves even just a few women’s lives it is a great campaign and building awareness’. So, women should accept being denigrated by having their need for sensitivity and empathy dismissed in this way for the sake of that low bar. Instead of having a strong and clear message that is not polarising and reaches and convinces as many as possible through different methods of communication targeted to each community’s needs.

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