Perfume brand slammed by Priyanka Chopra over promoting gang rape culture in ad is sorry for ‘wrongly perceived’ commercial


An Indian perfume brand has apologized after a television commercial for one of its products was widely condemned for promoting rape culture, but said the ad was simply “wrongly perceived.”

The advertisement, for a male body spray called Layer’r Shot, shows four men seemingly watching a woman in a grocery store before one of them uses the product.

“We’re four, and there’s only one,” one of the men remarks as the men stare at the woman.

One of his companions adds: “So who will take the shot?”

As the woman begins to appear scared, the camera then pans to reveal the men are looking at and discussing the Layer’r Shot body spray.

“We never intended to hurt anyone’s feelings or outrage any women’s modesty or promote any sort of culture, as wrongly perceived by some,” Layer'r Shot said in a statement posted to social media on Monday.

“However, we sincerely apologise for the advertisements that consequently caused rage amongst individual and several communities and beg their pardon.”

The company added that it had voluntarily informed its media partners to stop broadcasting the commercial from June 4.

A number of high-profile figures criticized the advert for making light of gang rape.

It was broadcast just a week after a 17-year-old girl was reportedly sexually assaulted by multiple perpetrators in the Indian city of Hyderabad—the latest in a string of similar crimes that have plagued the country in recent years.

Actress Priyanka Chopra said in a tweet on Saturday that the commercial was “shameful and disgusting.”

“How many levels of clearances did it take for this commercial to be green lit?” she said. “How many people thought this was ok? I’m so glad that it was called out and now the ministry has taken it down. Appalling!”

Bollywood actress Richa Chadha said on Twitter on Saturday that the advert “is not an accident.”

“To make an ad, a brand goes through several layers of decision making,” she said. “Creatives, script, agency, client, casting…DOES EVERYONE THINK RAPE IS A JOKE? Revelatory! This brand [and] the agency that made this ad need to be sued for the filth they’re serving.”

Meanwhile, writer and director Farhan Akhtar slammed the commercial as “shameful.”

“What incredibly tasteless and twisted minds it must take to think up, approve and create these stinking body spray ‘gang rape’ innuendo ads,” he said in a tweet.

Ashok Swain, a professor of peace and conflict research at Sweden’s Uppsala University, said in a tweet that the commercial “romanticized gang rape.”

Before the commercial was taken off air, the Delhi Commission for Women wrote to India’s Broadcasting Minister Anurag Thakur to demand it was no longer allowed airtime, and asked that the perfume brand be fined to deter others from making similar adverts, according to the Economic Times of India.


 
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Thats just how Currys are
 
Ashok Swain, a professor of peace and conflict research at Sweden’s Uppsala University, said in a tweet that the commercial “romanticized gang rape.”

I'm sorry...WHERE is this guy working again?
Well that definitely qualifies him as a rape culture expert doesn’t it?
 
The ad is fairly standard and would be fine here, but I get where they're coming from considering India's issues with rape in general, let alone gang rape, are far bigger than in the western world. The more common it is for a woman to hear that sort of thing or be worried about follow through, the less successful the basic bait-and-switch with 'We're actually talking about the product!'

I mean, it's a body spray called 'Shot'. Imagine if they did the same thing but with someone mistaking them for talking about going into a school with a gun. Funny as a dark parody, but played straight it would likely leave a bad taste.
 
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Indians have this awful cluster behaviour around women. I don't doubt for a second gang rapes are common.
Gang rapes aren’t common, they are endemic. It’s not widely discussed in the West because “enriching cultures” but India is hell for women.
 
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Indians have this awful cluster behaviour around women. I don't doubt for a second gang rapes are common.
Rape and murder. Most of the victims never see any other justice outside of street justice because the rapists fuckin' burn them to death.
Imagine being a father and your daughter heads out to a local field to take a shit because toilets aren't working because your people breed like cockroaches; since nearly everyone has to shit outside some roving band of pervert stumble across her and decide it's rape time. They have their way with her and then to try and hide the evidence they burn her alive.
 
Rape and murder. Most of the victims never see any other justice outside of street justice because the rapists fuckin' burn them to death.
Imagine being a father and your daughter heads out to a local field to take a shit because toilets aren't working because your people breed like cockroaches; since nearly everyone has to shit outside some roving band of pervert stumble across her and decide it's rape time. They have their way with her and then to try and hide the evidence they burn her alive.
A lot of fathers sadly don’t care that much. In rural Indian (or in impoverished urban areas), it’s not uncommon for young girls from a low cast to be sold as a house maid (basically a slave) or to a brothel.
Once the girl is sold she can buy her freedom by repaying her captors, which usually doesn’t happen unless she catches another young girl when she’s older herself.

It’s obviously not legal but no one cares because brothels are a way to keep rapists marginally out of the streets and to give single man a chance to fuck without bothering married women.
 
Body spray for poo-loos is probably made of that same stuff trauma-scene cleanup crews use when they roll up on grandpa's house who nobody had thought to check on in 6 months.

girl hot though
 
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