06/26/2020
Earlier: Skin Lightening: Michael Jackson, Sammy Sosa, and Neymar
From The New York Times news section:
Unilever and Johnson & Johnson Retreat on Pushing Lighter Skin
Unilever is removing the words âwhitening,â âlighteningâ and âfairnessâ from its packaging for its Fair & Lovely brand.
By Priya Arora and Sapna Maheshwari
June 25, 2020As major consumer products companies have rushed to declare their opposition to racism in response to the national outrage over the killing of George Floyd, many of them have been accused of openly promoting a beauty standard rooted in racism and discrimination.
Unilever, Procter & Gamble, LâOreal and Johnson & Johnson â some of the worldâs biggest advertisers â sell beauty products that advocate lighter, whiter skin in Africa, Asia and the Middle East. Those products are not marketed in the United States, but the sales of the skin lighteners have drawn criticism, especially from South Asians, for perpetuating colorism â the term describing the preference for lighter skin â in other countries, under popular brand names like Pondâs, Olay, Garnier and Neutrogena, and their own labels like Fair & Lovely.
The backlash appears to be forcing action. Unilever said on Thursday that it would remove the words âfair/fairness, white/whitening, and light/lighteningâ from product packaging and communications and change the name of its Fair & Lovely brand, a juggernaut in India that has marketed lighter skin as a path to success for decades. âŚ
âWe recognize that the use of the words âfairâ, âwhiteâ and âlightâ suggest a singular ideal of beauty that we donât think is right, and we want to address this,â said Sunny Jain, Unileverâs president of beauty and personal care. âŚ
What kind of U-boat captain name is âSunny Jainâ?
In South Asia, anti-blackness and colorism have origins that predate colonialism and systemically reinforce differences in caste and class. âŚ
Skin-lightening products are estimated to be a multibillion-dollar market, though its precise size is difficult to estimate, particularly as brands alter the language on their products to less overtly promote changes in skin tone. Fair & Lovely, for example, will continue to be sold, though Unilever noted it had removed âbefore-and-after impressions and shade guides that could indicate a transformation.â
Mr. Jain announced that Fair & Lovelyâs new slogan will be: âLook more like George Floyd!â