
Brooke Bond Red Label Tea's
latest advertisement attempts to promote its "five Ayurvedic herbs"
proposition through a humorous neighbourhood setting. A young woman moves into
a new apartment and three elderly men, one after another, approach her with
forwarded WhatsApp remedies involving Ashwagandha, Tulsi and honey. Finally, an
elderly woman enters the scene, smiles, and offers a cup of Red Label Tea with
five Ayurvedic herbs. Everyone laughs and harmony is restored.
However, the advertisement is disturbing at several levels. The three elderly men are portrayed in a manner that makes them appear intrusive rather than caring. Their body language and tone make the interaction seem awkward and somewhat ridiculous. Instead of appearing paternal or neighbourly, they come across as caricatures. One also wonders how they managed to get the young woman's WhatsApp number in the first place, a question the ad conveniently ignores.
Watching the commercial reminded me of the 1982 Hindi film Shaukeen, where three ageing men, played by Ashok Kumar, Utpal Dutt and A.K. Hangal, become infatuated with a much younger woman portrayed by Rati Agnihotri. Forty-four years later, have we really moved beyond such stereotypes?
Perhaps the ad's creators intended harmless humour. Yet, once again, the woman becomes the object around which male attention revolves. Even the elderly woman in the advertisement appears to endorse the behaviour rather than question it.
A gender reversal might have made the idea more interesting. Imagine three elderly women fussing over a young male tenant with forwarded health tips. Would our supposedly progressive society accept it? Probably not. The double standards are evident.
Ironically, the "forwarding" angle itself reflects a stereotype. Many people associate elderly WhatsApp users with endless forwards, jokes and health remedies. Rather than challenging clichés, the advertisement merely updates old stereotypes with a digital twist.
Advertising is at its best when it surprises us with fresh insights. Recycling dated stereotypes and wrapping them in contemporary settings may generate a smile, but it hardly represents creative progress. Come on, advertising. Wake up and serve us some truly new ideas.
Keywords: Red Label Tea ad, Brooke Bond Red Label advertisement, controversial ads India, gender stereotypes in advertising, WhatsApp forwards, Shaukeen movie reference, objectification in ads, marketing critique
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