By NATALIA HAWK
When the video was first uploaded to Youtube a few weeks ago, I was very quick to click on it.
My first reaction was: Why did I just spend two minutes of my life essentially staring at another girl’s butt when I was supposed to be watching a video about a surfing event?
My second reaction was: WHERE IS THE SURFING?
Because, believe it or not, that wasn’t an ad for hair removal cream or a lingerie brand. It was a promo for Roxy Pro Biarritz, a surfing contest for professional female surfers run by women’s fashion and surfing brand, Roxy.
Roxy Pro has been running every year for the last eight years and brings together top women surfers from around the world in the surfing capital of Europe.
I love Roxy. Love the promotion they do for women’s surfing all around the world, love the events they sponsor and support – not only for surfing but also for snowboarding.
But I hated their promo video. HATED it.
And women everywhere are – understandably – reacting the same way. Roxy is being slammed for unnecessarily sexualising women’s sport, for making something that’s supposed to be about professional athletes into soft porn.
The woman whose face you hardly get to see is Stephanie Gilmore. A phenomenal sporting champion and an outstanding role model for young women.
Yes, Stephanie Gilmore also happens to be hot. We get the freaking picture. But we can get that without the music, lighting and close ups of her well-waxed legs.
JUST SHOW US SOME SURFING ALREADY.
Top Comments
The fact is women are being over sexualised for the benefit of consumer response. There is a focus on her body for certain, as she is an objectively attractive young specimen, however should that really be the clincher? I think that the real way we can fight back against such anathema worthy faults of modern society is to cover all our women, vail them from sexual promiscuity. Ensure that no woman EVER looks good in a two piece. Ban the use of beauty product and hair stylists. Rise up in a sea of seething oestrogen, to hoist the female gender to the equal seat that is man! IT IS THE ONLY WAY
Bitchy bloggers be calm. It's an ad. Advertising a brand sponsoring an event. It stirs curiosity, and with the aid of a competition, it raises awareness. She's headless so consumers guess who she is and in turn, find out about the event. There's a focus on her body because it again, evokes intrigue and is obviously not unappealing. She's not surfing because it's a teaser commercial, which does exactly that - teases the viewer. There are countless commercials of surfers in the water. We know what surfing is, another ad like that would do nothing for the public and the company.
Would any of you even be thinking about women's surfing if it wasn't for this advertisement?
They've done something different and you're all proving that their risk was rewarded. Roxy and women's surfing 1 - Middle-raged women 0
YOU GET EM GAL PAL XX