Laundry
product firm denies racial slur in commercial that has outraged the world
By Emma Graham-Harrison
The Chinese commercial shows a
black man being treated with the
detergent … Photograph: YouTube |
The company behind a Chinese advert for detergent
that has been dubbed the most racist ever has defended the bizarre content, saying
any discrimination is in the eye of the viewer.
In
the advert a pouch of Qiaobi cleaning liquid is applied to a black man, who is
then bundled into a washing machine by a smiling woman. After a cycle of
muffled screams, she opens the lid and a grinning Asian man climbs out. He
winks at the viewer before the slogan flashes up on screen: Change begins with
Qiaobi.
The
commercial had apparently aired for months in China , without generating much debate, until a
flicker of online discontent was picked up by a local English-language website.
It posted a link to the ad and within hours it had gone viral, sparking a
global conversation about racism in a country that is officially home to 56
ethnic minorities but is dominated by Han Chinese, and can feel very
monocultural.
“Qiaobi
Detergent Ad Might Be The Most Racist TV Commercial Ever Made,” said the
Huffington Post, as global outrage grew. But a spokesman for Leishang cosmetics
company, which produces the detergent, said critics had overreacted. “The
foreign media might be too sensitive about the ad,” a man named only as Wang
told the local Global Times tabloid. “We meant nothing but to promote the
product, and we had never thought about the issue of racism.”
Other
company employees were less coy about the ad, which is a virtual copy of an
older Italian commercial for detergent that shows a sleazy white man being
transformed into a muscular black man, with the slogan “coloured is better”.
“We
did this for some sensational effect,” Xu Chunyan, an agent for the company, told
the New York Times. “If we just show laundry like all the other advertisements,
ours will not stand out.”
As
a strategy it appears to have failed: the ad drew huge controversy abroad but
little attention at home, with just a few thousand viewing it on domestic video
sharing sites, even after the scandal broke. Some Chinese viewers were
frustrated. “If the ad showed a person of Asian origin being ‘washed’ white, wouldn’t
this kind of person feel discriminated against,” asked one poster on the
popular Weibo microblogging site.
But
mostly the ad was met with apathy, perhaps because there is limited public
debate about racism in China , where a bestselling toothpaste is still
called “Black Man Toothpaste” more than two decades after its English name was
changed from Darkie to Darlie.
A
copy of the detergent ad posted on a local video-sharing site with a caption
asking “Is this ad racist?”, had not drawn a single comment.
Beijing
watches closely for slights against the country and its people in international
commentary, and the Chinese media was quick to dub US presidential candidate
Donald Trump a “racist”, but the government shows much less interest in
monitoring domestic conversations about race.
China’s
lack of diversity – it does not encourage long-term immigration, and the UN
says it hosts only 150 refugees in a population of over 1.3 billion – can spill
over into overt discrimination, particularly for people of colour. In 2009 the
vicious response to a contestant on an TV talent show who had mixed Chinese and
African-American heritage highlighted some of China ’s problems.
One
African-American who spent several years in China recalled being fired as an English teacher, despite
his excellent professional skills, because students were obsessed with his skin
colour. Marketus Presswood wrote: “I overheard students talking in Chinese
about how they were paying so much money and wanted a white instructor. One
went so far as to say, ‘I don’t want to look at his black face all night’.”
Presswood added that he hoped attitudes were changing as Chinese engagement
with the world increased.