Follow up to the whole Dockers thing
Mar. 15th, 2010 09:51 amSo, a week or so after emailing them, I finally got a reply from someone:
Hi,
Samantha here from Dockers(R). Thanks for checking in with us.
The Dockers(r) "Wear The Pants" campaign is intended to give men a reason to love their khakis, the focus of this campaign. We apologize if our efforts did not resonate with you.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts with us. We'll definitely pass them along to our Marketing colleagues who pay close attention to consumer feedback.
If there's anything else we can help you with, just email us back or give us a call at 1-800-DOCKERS. We're available Monday - Friday, 6:00am - 4:30pm Pacific Time.
Thanks again,
Samantha
Levi Strauss & Co.
Consumer Relations
*rolls eyes* So they're trying to give men a "reason to love their khakis" by telling them that without them, they're androgynous wussy boys with no power and the world is going to hell for want of a strong (male) hand at the helm. Bite me, Dockers.
Also, if people want to add their comments, since Marketing pays such close attention to public feedback, the email address is: info@dockers.com
Hi,
Samantha here from Dockers(R). Thanks for checking in with us.
The Dockers(r) "Wear The Pants" campaign is intended to give men a reason to love their khakis, the focus of this campaign. We apologize if our efforts did not resonate with you.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts with us. We'll definitely pass them along to our Marketing colleagues who pay close attention to consumer feedback.
If there's anything else we can help you with, just email us back or give us a call at 1-800-DOCKERS. We're available Monday - Friday, 6:00am - 4:30pm Pacific Time.
Thanks again,
Samantha
Levi Strauss & Co.
Consumer Relations
*rolls eyes* So they're trying to give men a "reason to love their khakis" by telling them that without them, they're androgynous wussy boys with no power and the world is going to hell for want of a strong (male) hand at the helm. Bite me, Dockers.
Also, if people want to add their comments, since Marketing pays such close attention to public feedback, the email address is: info@dockers.com
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Date: 2010-03-15 03:13 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-03-15 06:37 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-03-15 11:58 pm (UTC)J
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Date: 2010-03-16 12:26 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-03-16 05:19 am (UTC)I'd actually be curious to see what you wrote them so I can contextually figure out what exactly their response means.
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Date: 2010-03-16 08:54 am (UTC)Their response means that nobody in marketing is going to read the email.
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Date: 2010-03-16 04:23 pm (UTC)Of course there is an empirical way to test this.
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Date: 2010-03-16 07:51 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-03-16 01:10 pm (UTC)Here's what I sent:
To Whom It May Concern:
I live in Toronto and I am a daily reader of the Metro. I am writing to express my discomfort with the advertisement for Dockers khakis, found on the inside front cover of today's (Monday, March 8, 2010) newspaper. To be explicit, this copy printed as the shape of a man's torso 'wearing' the aforementioned khakis:
Once upon a time, men wore the pants, and wore them well. Women rarely had to open doors and little old ladies never crossed the street alone. Men took charge because that's what they did. But somewhere along the way, the world decided it no longer needed men. Disco by disco, latte by foamy non-fat latte, men were stripped of their khakis and left stranded on the road btween boyhood and androgyny. But today, there are questions our genderless society has no answers for. The world sits idly by as cities crumble, children misbehave and those little old ladies remain on one side of the street. For the first time since bad guys, we need heroes. We need grown-ups. We need men to put down the plastic fork, step away from the salad bar and untie the world from the tracks of complacency. It's time to get your hands dirty. It's time to answer the call of manhood. It's time to WEAR THE PANTS.
This would be bad enough any day. For it to be the cover advertisement of the Metro, one of the biggest free newspapers, on International Women's Day is bordering on tragic irony. Once again the media is blaming feminism for the emasculation of men and has decided the world is a worse-off place for it. It's wonderful to know that today's world, because women no longer wait for men to rescue them, can be considered weak, childish and going to hell in a handbasket, our civilisation crumbling because men are no longer "able to take charge".
I will not be purchasing Docker's or Levi Strauss and I will be encouraging my friends to do the same. Nor will I be picking up the Metro newspaper in future. I would hope, in a world that has progressed past the sexism of the fifties, you'd be able to see the insult given in this particular advertising angle, not only to women, but to those men who strive to be more than beer-swilling, sports-watching cavemen.
Sincerely,
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Date: 2010-03-16 04:24 pm (UTC)Yeah I don't know. It's hard to read context in letters like that. ARE you or any of your friends going to be following up?
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Date: 2010-03-16 04:39 pm (UTC)I've also not picked up the Metro since then, and while I haven't been shopping for pants, LeviStrauss is off the list of brands I'll buy.
Doing as much as one person can, and hoping that people do the same. I don't see a lot of point calling them back, but I do think encouraging more people to complain will get their attention and drive it home that it's a crappy campaign to be running.
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Date: 2010-03-16 08:38 pm (UTC)