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What's behind China's 'racist' whitewashing advert?

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9 years 4 weeks ago #427007 by thadeusz
www.bbc.com/news/wor...-china-36394917

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A Chinese laundry detergent advertisement is causing widespread outrage online and is being dubbed the most racist commercial to be screened.
But racist advertising has form, and not just in China.
A black man walks in and gets 'washed' a different colour
The scene: a young Chinese woman is doing her laundry. In walks a black man, with some paint stains on his face.
They look at each other suggestively. She puts a tab of detergent into his mouth....

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...and then shoves him into the washing machine.

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Hey presto! He emerges a fair-skinned Chinese man.

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The lady doing laundry is apparently delighted by this development.

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It is a month old but it is shocking the Internet now
It has appalled many on Facebook and other forums over the last 24 hours. But the ad itself is about a month old, having appeared on television and been shown at cinemas in China. At that time it didn't cause much of a furore with cinema-goers.
But then it was shared by US expat Christopher Powell, a musician with the Guiyang Symphony Orchestra, and by DJ Spencer Tarring.

Although the story was not covered widely by Chinese media, there were hundreds of comments on Chinese social media, with some calling the advert "awkward".
One user, @YY_CodingBear, said: "My lord. Do Chinese marketing people not have any racial education?"
However, another user said they did not see any problem with the advert.
The owner of the detergent has also commented
"I don't know much about the advertisement," the owner of Qiaobi laundry detergent, who identified himself as Mr Xia, told BBC Chinese's Grace Tsoi.
He said he did not realise it was racist until it was pointed out to him: "To be honest, I didn't really pay that much attention to the advertisement."
It mirrors an Italian advert for detergent, equally fraught with ethical issues, that does just the opposite - by washing a white man to black to advertise "coloured" laundry powder.
It's not the first time we have seen awkward advertising in China
The Darlie brand of toothpaste is called "black man toothpaste" in China.

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Darlie toothpaste used to be known as "Darkie" toothpaste, until it was rebranded.
The significance of the name change was lost on many, analysts say.
And recently in Hong Kong, an insurance advert showed a man dressed up like a Filipina domestic helper, with a blacked up face.
It did not amuse Hong Kong audiences.
Chinese attitudes to race are complicated
A few years ago a well-known Chinese beer brand, Harbin, invited basketball star Shaquille O'Neal to endorse the beverage, presumably to expand into the global market.
The US NBA competition is massive in China, and stars like Kobe Bryant are hugely popular, so it shouldn't have been a controversial move.
But on Tianya, one of China's most popular forums, some netizens weren't happy, with some posting overtly racist and discriminatory comments.

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Certain posts called for a boycott because it was endorsed by "a black man". Some of the comments touched upon Aids and described Africans as orangutans.
However, experts say, that does not mean that Chinese think of themselves as the most superior, with some saying Caucasians enjoy a higher status in certain quarters.
There is a history of cultural bias against people of dark skin.
But we cannot dismiss it as just a racist place
Barry Sautman, a political scientist at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, believes it shows the particular problems China has dealing with portrayals of race.
"It is not a question of Chinese not having anti-racist consciousness. They do."
In 2008, a World Public Opinion poll about government action to prevent racial discrimination interviewed people from 16 countries. China came second - 90% of Chinese respondents said racial equality is important.
The small number of Africans living in China does not help. According to the latest census, only 600,000 foreigners are living in China, a small portion of them black.
So the vast majority of the 1.3bn population has no experience interacting with black people.
China's government is trying to change attitudes towards Africans. State media have promoted several stories about warming China-Africa relations, and lauded African people who have successfully learned Chinese.
The 'white ideal' is also a pan-Asian phenomenon
Controversial whitening adverts are part of the beauty scene right across Asia.
In the Philippines, once colonised by Spain, white skin is associated with mixed ancestry. Annual beauty polls are conducted to rank the best whitening soaps, treatments and lotions.

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In Thailand a "racist" skin-whitening ad was withdrawn earlier this year after being condemned as racist.
And racist advertising has a long and global pedigree
Of course overtly racist advertising has been found in Britain and the US as well.

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British and US advertisements for Pears Soap dating from the early 19th Century pushed the racist stereotype of black skin as dirty and white as somehow pure and desirable.
Reporting by the BBC's Grace Tsoi, Vincent Ni, Heather Chen and Kerry Allen.
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9 years 4 weeks ago #427009 by Whatusername
Replied by Whatusername on topic What's behind China's 'racist' whitewashing advert?
This isn't even a story to people with Asian background. Asians (living in Asia) are one of the if not the most racist people in the world, not out of bad intention, but due to pure culture circumstances. Asians in Asia don't have the concepts of and, never had to deal with the issue of race quality, because Asians have not had to deal with multiple race living together. In the more westernized Asian countries like Japan, other race is more commonly seen from tourism, but they're still never large enough of population for them to be considered part of the citizens. To Asians in Asia, people of other race are always different, from another country, with another culture. They never had to accept people of another race as citizen of their own. Naturally, the social progress is far slower in Asia. The mindset there isn't any different from western countries before the 50's, when western countries haven't had to accept people of other race as part of their citizens and therefore treat and see them as equal people.

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9 years 4 weeks ago #427010 by jasonlovecamera
Replied by jasonlovecamera on topic What's behind China's 'racist' whitewashing advert?

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9 years 4 weeks ago - 9 years 4 weeks ago #427013 by Benny

Whatusername wrote: This isn't even a story to people with Asian background. Asians (living in Asia) are one of the if not the most racist people in the world, not out of bad intention, but due to pure culture circumstances. Asians in Asia don't have the concepts of and, never had to deal with the issue of race quality, because Asians have not had to deal with multiple race living together. In the more westernized Asian countries like Japan, other race is more commonly seen from tourism, but they're still never large enough of population for them to be considered part of the citizens. To Asians in Asia, people of other race are always different, from another country, with another culture. They never had to accept people of another race as citizen of their own. Naturally, the social progress is far slower in Asia. The mindset there isn't any different from western countries before the 50's, when western countries haven't had to accept people of other race as part of their citizens and therefore treat and see them as equal people.


Multiple race,the first country i came across is China. We have pure "blonde" that has longer existence and continue living way before "black beauty"was bough into US.
Last edit: 9 years 4 weeks ago by Benny.

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9 years 4 weeks ago #427015 by boasivir

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9 years 4 weeks ago #427019 by Songbird96
I am not trying to offend anyone, honest; but, for crying out loud, this is 2016...smh. Racism is pathetic and stupid. None of us asked to be born a certain color, or of a certain ethnicity. And we should not have to apologize for it. It is our differences that make life so much more interesting. If everyone looked the same, life would be hum-drum and boring. None of us are superior, or better than anyone. And the more we realize this, take it to heart, and humble ourselves, the better this world will be. <3

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9 years 4 weeks ago - 9 years 4 weeks ago #427022 by gabriel.lu
I saw this ad on the telly weeks ago; maybe a even a month..and the term "racist" is blowing all of this out of proportion. It was all done with good intentions; and its a pretty catchy washing detergent advert - but the Chinese probably didn't even realise the racism factor

They were just copying the Italian advert where the white guy turned out to be black - nobody shouted racism there tho..

Darlie toothpaste rocks!

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This is the typical kind of thing that's being done in China.. so, it ain't surprising

...scio me nescire
Last edit: 9 years 4 weeks ago by gabriel.lu. Reason: added Star Wars Ad

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9 years 4 weeks ago - 9 years 4 weeks ago #427027 by Parker McGoop
Replied by Parker McGoop on topic What's behind China's 'racist' whitewashing advert?

gabriel.lu wrote: I saw this ad on the telly weeks ago; maybe a even a month..and the term "racist" is blowing all of this out of proportion. It was all done with good intentions; and its a pretty catchy washing detergent advert - but the Chinese probably didn't even realise the racism factor

They were just copying the Italian advert where the white guy turned out to be black - nobody shouted racism there tho..

Darlie toothpaste rocks!

This is the typical kind of thing that's being done in China.. so, it ain't surprising


Are you ** ****, a troll, or am I misunderstanding what you're trying to say? What *** **** are you trying to say?

*Language, slander. Keep it civil please.
Last edit: 9 years 4 weeks ago by .

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9 years 4 weeks ago - 9 years 4 weeks ago #427036 by Whatusername
Replied by Whatusername on topic What's behind China's 'racist' whitewashing advert?
Reading the comment section of the article on Facebook... I see so many self righteous Americans there venting their "outrage"; how "disgusted and insulted" they feel. Let's not forget, only just 49 years ago it was not legal for people of different race to get married in 17 states. It's a fact that many people in the US still feels the same way about dating African Americans or male Asian Americans as the Chinese girl did in the commercial. Replace the Chinese girl with a white girl, and the Chinese guy with a white guy, and that video represents opinion of quite large portion of the western countries still. US and other western countries just have the political correctness of not incorporate that into a commercial. Yes, while not perfect, US has come far in terms of racial equality. But let's not assume that other countries can keep up the pace of social progress with the number 1 country in the world. To put in perspective, US landed on the moon in 1969, just a couple of years after interracial marriage was legalized across the country. China is not close to moon landing yet. Countries and societies progress at different rate.
Last edit: 9 years 4 weeks ago by Whatusername.

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9 years 4 weeks ago #427038 by cyadn
I thought China has a descent space program and has sent ppl to the moon?

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