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Let them drink clams
We have not seen the ad ourselves and Cadbury Schweppes has refused to share it with us, but we understand that the Clamato ads feature a young woman, dressed in a suggestive "nurse" uniform, ringing an apartment doorbell. A young man answers, they look at each other, and the young woman puts on a rubber glove. The spot ends with the young woman leaving, after the couple presumably got up to some totally "fun and entertaining" activity. We understand the idea was that these two were already well-acquainted, and that this was a "role playing" encounter, not a direct suggestion that nurses tend to show up at strangers' doors looking for naughty fun with gloves. However, even if the ad suggested only that one couple was having erotic fun with the "naughty nurse" image, it's still a problem. Though their fun may have been private, the ad featuring it was certainly anything but. Such ads broadcast and endorse the sexually available female nurse stereotype. Nursing remains over 90% female today, and we are now in the midst of a critical global shortage that directly threatens lives. Would we object to this sort of "role playing" even if it was not broadcast to millions of people? We would. The Center wants everyone to have fun, but if that fun includes workplace-related fantasies, we urge everyone to consider the hundreds of options other than the naughty nurse. In response to concerns of the Center and several nurses, Cadbury Schweppes promised to do what it could to curtail the final scheduled broadcasts of the ads, but it's not clear how much effect that will have. The company also sent us this message on August 5, 2005:
This is a start, but it falls well short of an apology, a promise not to place similar ads in the future, or a recognition of the serious nature of the issues involved here. The apparent excuse that the ads were meant to be fun and youth-oriented was obviously inadequate. The naughty nurse is always "fun," but that has not stopped her from reinforcing the pernicious idea that nurses are sexually available to patients and physicians in the workplace. Ads exist to influence the way people think; they don't stop working because they're "fun." And it's hard not to be put off by the blatant effort to push the product even in what should be a message addressing the concerns of a life-saving profession in the midst of a major crisis. Spicy is one word for it.
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The URL for this page is www.nursingadvocacy.org/news/2005aug/clamato.html |
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