We had a discussion about this campaign in class today. "Dove Campaign for Real Beauty" was launched in 2003 when Dove was expanding into beauty products. Rather than taking the traditional fair equals beauty approach the campaign aimed at making women comfortable with their own body and attempted to highlight how distorted our idea of beauty was.
The company subsequently created two videos for social media - "Daughters" and "Evolution" which were followed by two more - "Onslaught" and "Amy". I personally like Evolution more because (besides being well executed) it surprises you and kind of makes you think, unlike Daughters which just seems like another TVC for a beauty product.
The success of the videos inspired numerous parodies, one of which (Slob Evolution) went on to be nominated for the Daytime Emmy Awards.
In the 2008, the New Yorker revealed that the images used in the campaign were also digitally manipulated, which is ironic given the righteous tone of the ads. Though that does raise further questions about the ethics at Unilever (which already faces much criticism for its Axe/Lynx and Fair and Lovely marketing strategy), it dosent take away the fact that the campaign was brilliantly executed and succeeded in creating a lot of buzz around Dove's beauty care range.





