Imogen Watson
Jul 20, 2023

'Offensive' Wuka period ad continues to air despite 295 ASA complaints

The TV ad, which demonstrates Wuka's leakproof range of reusable underwear, includes blood clots and period bleeding in the shower.

A TV ad by underwear brand Wuka will continue to air despite it racking up 295 complaints to the Advertising Standards Authority.

The taboo-breaking ad, which demonstrates Wuka's leakproof range of reusable underwear, includes blood clots and period bleeding in the shower.

The complainants contacted the ad regulator to argue the imagery is offensive and likely to cause distress.

In reaction, Wuka argued it pro-actively represented periods positively in the hope of encouraging people to talk more openly.

For Wuka, graphically depicting "real" periods helps normalise attitudes and perceptions.

It claimed period clots are a common symptom of menstruation, and underscored it followed medical guidance about the size and colour to ensure it was depicted accurately.

Further, Clearcast cleared the ad with an "ex-kids" scheduling restriction.

After consideration, the ASA decided not to ban the ad. Firstly, it said it was clear from the beginning it was related to menstruation, and therefore likely to feature imagery related to periods.

Given the context of the ad, the ASA said blood and blood clots would be recognised as menstrual flow, but it admitted this imagery was less common in the period ad category.

Although some of the blood imagery was associated with injury, which the ASA acknowledged might be distressing for viewers, in the context of the period product, it was a realistic and accurate depiction of consumers' menstruation experiences.

And while some young children might find the imagery unfamiliar, the average menstruation age begins at 12, with children starting their period as young as eight.

While the ASA admits some viewers might find the content distasteful, it concluded: "The imagery was not likely to cause serious or widespread offence, or excessive fear or distress."

In 2017 Bodyform and sister brand Libresse produced the first ad – “Blood normal” –  to depict real menstrual blood instead of blue liquid.

Source:
Campaign UK

Related Articles

Just Published

1 day ago

‘Creators are the new Hollywood,’ declares YouTube ...

Neal Mohan discussed how creators are driving growth in YouTube viewing on connected TV as part of the platform’s creator-heavy pitch during upfronts week.

1 day ago

Whisper unveils new phase of #KeepGirlsInSchool to ...

The latest poignant film seeks to normalise periods as healthy changes, empowering young girls to reshape their narratives around puberty.

1 day ago

IAS launches 'Election Lab' to help marketers ...

With major political events, marketers must be wary of a rise in news-related misinformation and risky content to protect brand reputation.

1 day ago

Google is fully embracing its AI era

Tech giant’s AI model Gemini will soon allow users to interact with it across Gmail and mobile apps, including a live voice chat feature and several multimodal advancements.