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knnbcjb! what's wrong with wanting to be fair and lovely? you mean nowadays wanting to be fair is a sin or crime?

kaninabuchaojibye

Alfrescian
Loyal
Fair and Lovely: A skin-lightening cream rebrands, but prejudice remains
By Geeta Pandey BBC News, Delhi
A sales assistant holds Unilever product, Fair and Lovely skin fairness cream at a shop in New Delhi on April 30, 2013.
Image copyright Getty Images
Consumer giant Unilever says it will rebrand its bestselling skin lightening cream Fair and Lovely and drop the word "fair" from its name. While the news has been welcomed, campaigners say the move doesn't go far enough - and in India demand for such products shows no sign of waning.
Unilever and its Indian subsidiary Hindustan Unilever Limited (HUL) have been criticised extensively for promoting colourism and making girls with darker shades feel insecure and inadequate.
Pressure had been mounting since last week when US multinational Johnson and Johnson announced it would no longer produce or sell two of its creams which are popular in Asia and the Middle East in response to the death of George Floyd and the worldwide debate about racism it sparked.
"Conversations over the past few weeks highlighted that some product names or claims on our Neutrogena and Clean & Clear dark-spot reducer products represent fairness or white as better than your own unique skin tone," Johnson and Johnson said in a statement. "This was never our intention - healthy skin is beautiful skin."
Fair and Lovely is India's largest selling skin lightening cream, with 24bn rupees ($317m; £256m) in annual revenue.
Ever since the 1970s when it first hit the market, millions of tubes are bought every year by teenagers and young women in a country where lighter skin is routinely equated with beauty.
Top Bollywood actors and actresses have appeared in advertisements to endorse Fair and Lovely that promote fair skin as a means to a finding love or a glamorous job.
On Thursday morning, Fair & Lovely trended high on Twitter in India with hundreds demanding a ban on its advertising and sale.
In the past two weeks, at least three change.org petitions have come up globally, asking Unilever to banish the cream from markets in Asia and Asian stores in the West.
A large billboard advertising skin lightening cream in Jessore, Bangladesh.
Image copyright Getty ImagesFair and Lovely is popular in several Asian countries, including in Bangladesh
One said this product "built upon, perpetuated and benefited from internalized racism and promotes anti-blackness sentiments amongst all its consumers".
On Thursday afternoon, Unilever decided to act saying that "a new name has been chosen for the cream and is awaiting regulatory approvals".
More on this topic:
"We recognise that the use of the words 'fair', 'white' and 'light' suggest a singular ideal of beauty that we don't think is right, and we want to address this," the company said in a statement.
It added that they were working to make their skin care portfolio "more inclusive" and "want to lead the celebration of a more diverse portrayal of beauty".
In the past few years, they said they had already made some changes - such as removing a shade card from the packaging and no longer doing before and after comparisons of skin tones in their advertisements.
They also promised to "feature women of different skin tones, representative of the variety of beauty across India and other countries" in their future campaigns.
'It's still fairness cream no matter what they call it'
While many rejoiced over the announcement, describing it as historic and a huge victory, others pointed out that it was old wine in a new bottle as the company was still going to sell the same cream with the same ingredients, but with a new name.
Chandana Hiran, who authored one of the petitions, told the BBC the Unilever announcement was "a path-breaking decision" but was only "a first step towards inclusivity".
"While I am glad that they're willing to change the narrative, I really want them to relook at their product in its essence. It's still fairness cream no matter what they call it."
So, the important question is - is a name change enough to change perceptions about skin colour that have been held and perpetuated over centuries?
In recent years, campaigns such as Dark is Beautiful and #unfairandlovely have questioned Indian's obsession with fair skin.
Increasingly, urban-educated women on social media have called out Bollywood stars and popular beauty pageants for promoting colourism.
#unfairandlovely: Women speak out against skin lightening
But the campaigns have had very limited impact, they have not dented the popularity or the market for fairness products, with the demand continuing to rise.
That explains why last week's announcement by Johnson and Johnson to withdraw its fairness products had some people in Asia saying if they wanted to buy them, they should be allowed to.
On social media some even said this was a form of discrimination against their communities.
And I know that in many parts of India too, the unavailability of Fair and Lovely is going to be greeted with distress - a large number of customers are in small town and rural India and unaware of the politics over skin colour and the Black Lives Matter movement that's raging in the West.
And they would embrace Fair and Lovely's substitute whatever it's called.
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
All they have to do is market a skin darkening cream alongside the lightening cream and let the market decide for itself which is more popular.
 

sweetiepie

Alfrescian
Loyal
All they have to do is market a skin darkening cream alongside the lightening cream and let the market decide for itself which is more popular.
Correct KNN but just anyhow kor some dark coloured cream can liao they wouldn't want to waste capital doing r&d KNN who knows the dark one can sell more KNN
 

Scrooball (clone)

Alfrescian
Loyal
Nowadays cannot have fair complexion, cannot be a republican, cannot wear a trump hat, cannot dislike fat ppl , cannot say mean jokes.... fuck everything la
 

knnb40

Alfrescian
Loyal
back in the 80s and 90s, many UK and Japs in sentosa sun tanning.
these people want to be not that "white"...
I was there every weekend as the female UK and Jap tanning will expose as much of their skin as possible and I am there eating ice-cream:geek:
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
To the cultural Marxists, to be born white is to be born with sin.

But somehow they're the moral crusaders against 'racism'... go figure that out! :biggrin:
 

syed putra

Alfrescian
Loyal
OTHER3 YEARS AGO
Teen Bullied For Her Incredibly Dark Skin Color Becomes A Model, Takes The Internet By Storm
3Mviews

photo1__30.jpg
LMA
Community member



We all know that the fashion industry can be a pretty harsh environment for work. Many girls just cannot take the pressure of looking their best at all times and turn away from the modeling possibilities. And though the industry has rigorous beauty standards, more and more unconventionally beautiful girls become the next superstars.
Khoudia Diop is a 19-year-old Senegalese fashion model who was once bullied about her dark skin color. But now the self-proclaimed “Melanin Goddess” is taking the internet by storm with her beautifully rich skin tone.”I was teased a lot growing up, because of my skin tone,” Khoudia, who is based in Paris, told the Daily Mail. “And even now sometimes, people will make racist comments. Growing up, I faced it by confronting the bullies. As I grew, I learned to love myself more every day, and not pay attention to the negative people.”
Since then Khoudia, now a famous model, who started modeling when she was 17, has won the internet with her beautiful pictures that have earned her a following of over 235k on Instagram. She’s also inspiring people to embrace their differences, writing that “If you’re lucky enough to be different, don’t ever change.” We couldn’t agree more.
More info: Instagram | Facebook (h/t: designyoutrust, dm)
“I was teased a lot growing up, because of my skin tone,” says 19-year-old model Khoudia Diop
dark-skin-model-melanin-goddess-khoudia-diop-4a

“And now even online sometimes, people will make comments”
dark-skin-model-melanin-goddess-khoudia-diop-7

“Growing up, I faced it by confronting the bullies”
dark-skin-model-melanin-goddess-khoudia-diop-2

“They nicknamed me darky, daughter of the night”
dark-skin-model-melanin-goddess-khoudia-diop-17

“As I grew, I learned to love myself more every day, and not pay attention to the negative people”
dark-skin-model-melanin-goddess-khoudia-diop-14

“The message I have for my sisters is that how you look doesn’t matter, as long as you feel beautiful inside”
dark-skin-model-melanin-goddess-khoudia-diop-15

“One of my goals is to make all my dark-skinned sisters out there laugh at those with their “beauty standards””
dark-skin-model-melanin-goddess-khoudia-diop-18

Khoudia only started modelling 2 years ago when she was just 17, but she already has over 235k followers on Instagram
dark-skin-model-melanin-goddess-khoudia-diop-9a

“If you’re lucky enough to be different, don’t ever change”
dark-skin-model-melanin-goddess-khoudia-diop-8
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Nowadays cannot have fair complexion, cannot be a republican, cannot wear a trump hat, cannot dislike fat ppl , cannot say mean jokes.... fuck everything la

You can do anything you want if you don't allow yourself to succumb to political correctness and the threats of the far left crybullies.
 

JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
My family and I love fair skin. Our skins are very fair. That's why we are so good looking!
 
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