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It was designed to get viewers to find the campaign website to watch Daughters and to participate in mother-daughter workshops. [17] After Evolution, Ogilvy produced Onslaught. [1] In April 2013, a video titled Dove Real Beauty Sketches was released as part of the campaign, created by Hugo Veiga
Inspired by market research that suggested only 4% of women describe themselves as beautiful (up from 2% in 2004), and around 54% believe that when it comes to how they look, they are their own worst beauty critic, Unilever's Dove brand has been conducting a marketing campaign called Dove Campaign for Real Beauty that aims to celebrate women's natural beauty since 2005. [2]
The video fades to the statement, "No wonder our perception of beauty is distorted." The film ends with an invitation to take part in the "Dove Real Beauty Workshops," the logo for the Dove Self-Esteem Fund, and, in some versions, the website address of Unilever-Dove's Campaign For Real Beauty, for which the film was originally produced.
A new Dove experiment reveals the true power behind feeling beautiful, and it's captured in a new short film called Dove: Patches. The "Today" show has more. 'They invited 10 women to wear a patch ...
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In September 2004, Dove began its Campaign for Real Beauty, followed by the creation of the Dove Self-Esteem Project in 2006, by Geyner Andres Gaona and Amy. The campaign has been criticized as hypocritical in light of the highly sexualized images of women presented in the advertising of Axe, which, like Dove, is produced by Unilever.
Dove uses advertising to display messages of positive self-esteem. In September 2004 Dove created a Real Beauty campaign, [122] focusing predominately on women of all shapes and colour. Later in 2007, this campaign furthered itself to include women of all ages.