Outdoor > Billboards: Sectors
MULLENLOWE UK, London / PERSIL / 2023
Overview
Credits
Background:
PERSIL’s global research revealed there’s one stain people globally wanted help removing.
It’s a stain that’s universally experienced and universally shamed for half the world’s population.
Blood. Specifically, menstrual blood.
For PERSIL, it wasn’t enough to only help wash away these stains.
We needed to wash away the taboo along with it.
We did this by capturing images of real people bleeding, and telling the real stories behind these stains.
From the first period to the last, we have told beautiful, funny, moving stories that belong to our mothers, aunts, sisters, friends, neighbours, daughters, and our daughter’s daughters. They belong to all of us.
Let’s wash away the taboo. Dirt Is Good.
Describe the Impact:
We worked with a leading psychotherapist, specialising in shame, to help remove the stigma and taboo around periods stains and address concerns around one of the most stubborn stains that 50% of the world's population face every month, and ultimately help them to wash away not just the stain but the taboo.
As we were about to go live with the campaign, the poster contractor ClearChannel rejected our campaign in the UK over concerns about the content. Likewise, Meta classified images of menstruation as ‘fetish content’ and as such rejects any imagery that features such on their platforms.
To overcome these barriers, we took our case and findings to the ASA and CAP who ruled in our favour, stating that we were not breaking any rules and as a result, we were successful in flighting the campaign and starting to break down the taboos against this common but unspoken stain.
Is there any cultural context that would help the jury understand how this work was perceived by people in the country where it ran?
Despite some progress in the wider category, period stains are still very much taboo in the UK. They are unpredictable, inevitable and shameful. 83% saying they're unpredictable, 66% inevitable - and 67% experience them at least once a cycle. And despite 77% saying they are natural, 71% still feel they're embarrassing, 48% say they should be hidden in shame.
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