Cross-posted at Jezebel.
There was a time when the idea of sticking needles into one’s face was something that was to be avoided at all costs. Then there was botox. And it didn’t take long before certain segments of society were flocking to the needlers, begging to be stuck. Face needling has become so commonplace — so desirable, even — that non-needly products have been disguising themselves as needles, so as to attract consumer dollars.
Of what am I speaking? A product sent in by Ella Dilkes-Frayne. Ella saw posters in a mall in Melbourne, Australia for non-injectable beauty products sold in containers that mimicked syringes. The product, hoping to capitalize on the new acceptance of and desire for botox, is a great example of how socially and personally acceptable bodily intervention is always changing.
Lisa Wade, PhD is an Associate Professor at Tulane University. She is the author of American Hookup, a book about college sexual culture; a textbook about gender; and a forthcoming introductory text: Terrible Magnificent Sociology. You can follow her on Twitter and Instagram.
Comments 7
Kat — March 20, 2011
I was surprised that you missed the most widely sold and advertised skin-cream-in-syringe product:
L'Oreal's Wrinkle De-Crease Collagen Filler Eye, advertised by Claudia Schiffer:
http://www4.images.coolspotters.com/photos/426343/loreal-collagen-filler-wrinkle-decontractor-profile.jpg
http://www3.images.coolspotters.com/photos/426341/claudia-schiffer-and-loreal-paris-gallery.jpg
http://www.loreal-paris.co.uk/img/l10n/products/305x262/SK4_6.jpg
There is also this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y4jluPup9ZY (with Linda Evangelista)
The slogan is "Innovation, NOT Intervention."
zoek — March 20, 2011
Ew gross..."freeze frame" D:
benjamin adam — March 20, 2011
I think another thing going on here is probably that these products are also part of a larger trend in which efficacy, strength, professionalism, etc. is alluded to by representing products as aesthetically or linguistically associated with the truth claims of science. This is the case with all sorts of things that come in pill form, or which use pseudo-scientific words in advertising. Simply put: things that come in syringes, in pills, etc. are understood as more effective, stronger, etc. - a kind of "by prescription only" claim.
Katie — March 20, 2011
"There was a time when the idea of sticking needles into one’s face was something that was to be avoided at all costs."
What about acupuncture?
LadyNews — March 21, 2011
Not quite as much like an actual syringe, but I remember about 6 years ago when I was doing a school project on beauty advertising I found one for a L'Oreal product which had little gauge/measurement lines on the tube and the ad showed Claudia Schiffer holding it as if it were a needle injection into her face; I think this is the product here (and the magazine ad featured the same image)
http://www.flickr.com/photos/albaum/435697154/
Samuel James — April 3, 2011
After reading about how the mother of an 8 year old injects her daughter for beauty pageants, I am a little weary about putting this stuff in the hands of non qualified professionals such as doctors.