New Durex Ad Cautions against Unprotected Sex

New Durex Ad Cautions against Unprotected Sex

When it comes to sexual health and safety, the line that is usually taken in advocating for wearing condoms involves the risk of contracting STDs, including HIV. Yet a recent Durex ad takes a different approach, warning couples against the pitfalls of unplanned pregnancy. The message of the ad is that a careless quickie after a night on the town could result in a bundle of misfortune, rather than joy.

The video shows the wreckage of a particularly messy play-date, a child spilling a burning hot beverage on his dad’s crotch, and more painful moments. The tagline of the ad is ‘protect yourself’, implying not only the protection against unwanted pregnancies which condoms provide, but also the long-term protection from accidental second-degree burns and destroyed golf clubs that is also provided by having safe sex.

Four years ago Durex had a massive YouTube hit with its ad ‘Get it On’ – a short animation featuring balloon animals made out of condoms. The condom brand has found all kinds of ways to market its products, not least the recent ‘Academy of Love’ in Venice which promised a handful of chosen couples from around the world an education in how to have fulfilling sex.

There was also this banned commercial, which took a similar approach to the recent Durex ad in showing a frustrated father having a stand-off with his son in a supermarket, over a bag of sweets. The idea is that men should think carefully about what being a parent entails. What ads such as these don’t consider is that many accidental fathers don’t stick around. A comment made by one YouTube user – on the ad featuring the supermarket tantrum – says it all: ‘I would’ve just left him in the store and never looked back’.

There have been many approaches to condom marketing – from ads scaring people with the horrors of serious STDs to those showing the downside of ‘accidentally’ having children. But besides calls to use existing forms of protection, there has also been a drive recently for the development of a condom that heightens sexual pleasure – earlier this year, Bill Gates reportedly put out a $100, 000 reward for an innovative (and safe) design overhaul.

Nataly Komova

Nutritionist. Bluffton University, MS

In today's world, people's eating and exercise patterns have changed, and it is often lifestyle that is the cause of many diet-related illnesses. I believe that each of us is unique – what works for one does not help another. What is more, it can even be harmful. I am interested in food psychology, which studies a person's relationship with their body and food, explains our choices and desires for specific products, the difficulty of maintaining optimal body weight, as well as the influence of various internal and external factors on appetite. I'm also an avid vintage car collector, and currently, I'm working on my 1993 W124 Mercedes. You may have stumbled upon articles I have been featured in, for example, in Cosmopolitan, Elle, Grazia, Women's Health, The Guardian, and others.

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