An oldie but a goodie reminder why it's good advice to keep the home tidied up...
Comments (16)
the last one was funny!
Hysterical!
Sick.
Hm. Not so funny to me.
Hey, the other two aren't funny either. Why must it always be women who are the butt of these "jokes"?
Love the older IKEA comercials!
Oh, yes, I'm sure misogyny was at the top of their checklist. But then, I find everybody ridiculous and an easy target for humor.
Take humorless people, for example.
Plus, the guys *I* know would really be into sucking on the tennis shoe lace, so the joke would be totally blown.
So to speak.
(P(too), where have you been all these months?)
shoe lace made me laugh, not the others
Woman stabbed in the back and killed, woman on all fours licking up a dirty shoelace? I'm not incapable of seeing the absurdist humour in the situations presented, but the way the gender roles play out is definitely misogynist.
Okay, "boys are messy" is sexist... Images of violence (stabbed with a fork) and degradation (crawling around on the floor in an attempt to seduce a man and ending up eating an old shoelace) is misogynistic. It's so common to see women depicted this way (particularly in advertising), but how often do we see men in the same positions?
tough crowd.
They're going to go with stereotypes with commercials. Men are generally thought of as less tidy then women, and the tag line "If not for yourself, at least for the others." means that it's going to be OTHER people suffering at the hands of their dirtiness. Sure, they could have a male friend suffer, but quite frankly it's more humorous when it's a love interest.
Misogyny is hatred, dislike, or mistrust of women. I fail to see how these commercials meet that definition. If anything, it's showing that, out of love for the women in their lives, men should be cleaner. The average man certainly isn't going to consider being cleaner for their friends. I hate it how the simplest things like this get turned into some kind of accusation of hatred of women on Ikea's part. That's as baseless as saying that they dislike kids for that last one.
"It's obviously just taking advantage of how innocent and clueless children are!"
everyone here so over-analyzed this. zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
ok...not everyone...just some people have absolutely no sense of humor at all
Comments (16)
the last one was funny!
Hysterical!
Sick.
Hm. Not so funny to me.
Hey, the other two aren't funny either. Why must it always be women who are the butt of these "jokes"?
Love the older IKEA comercials!
Oh, yes, I'm sure misogyny was at the top of their checklist. But then, I find everybody ridiculous and an easy target for humor.
Take humorless people, for example.
Plus, the guys *I* know would really be into sucking on the tennis shoe lace, so the joke would be totally blown.
So to speak.
(P(too), where have you been all these months?)
shoe lace made me laugh, not the others
Woman stabbed in the back and killed, woman on all fours licking up a dirty shoelace? I'm not incapable of seeing the absurdist humour in the situations presented, but the way the gender roles play out is definitely misogynist.
Okay, "boys are messy" is sexist... Images of violence (stabbed with a fork) and degradation (crawling around on the floor in an attempt to seduce a man and ending up eating an old shoelace) is misogynistic. It's so common to see women depicted this way (particularly in advertising), but how often do we see men in the same positions?
tough crowd.
They're going to go with stereotypes with commercials. Men are generally thought of as less tidy then women, and the tag line "If not for yourself, at least for the others." means that it's going to be OTHER people suffering at the hands of their dirtiness. Sure, they could have a male friend suffer, but quite frankly it's more humorous when it's a love interest.
Misogyny is hatred, dislike, or mistrust of women. I fail to see how these commercials meet that definition. If anything, it's showing that, out of love for the women in their lives, men should be cleaner. The average man certainly isn't going to consider being cleaner for their friends. I hate it how the simplest things like this get turned into some kind of accusation of hatred of women on Ikea's part. That's as baseless as saying that they dislike kids for that last one.
"It's obviously just taking advantage of how innocent and clueless children are!"
everyone here so over-analyzed this. zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
ok...not everyone...just some people have absolutely no sense of humor at all