The Shifting Blade of Corporate Activism When a razor company decides to pivot from selling sharp blades to slicing through social norms, it creates a friction that few marketers truly anticipate. The Gillette "We Believe" advert remains a pivotal moment in corporate messaging, not for its success, but for its fundamental misunderstanding of the male psyche. Instead of celebrating strength, it pathologizes it, framing natural male socialization as a precursor to predatory behavior. Conflating Play with Predation One of the most jarring elements of the campaign is its treatment of young boys. The advert depicts children roughhousing at a barbecue while fathers look on with indifference. The narrative suggests that allowing boys to engage in physical play fosters a "tyrannical misogynist in waiting." This represents a catastrophic failure to recognize the biological and psychological necessity of rough-and-tumble play. Research indicates that boys use physical competition to establish hierarchies and, crucially, to learn the limits of their own strength. When children play-fight, they develop proprioception and empathy. They learn that if they hit too hard, the game ends. By demanding that men step in to stop this behavior, the advert attempts to remove the very mechanism boys use to become socialized, regulated adults. The Feminist Lens and Empathy Gaps Directed by Kim Gehrig, the advert adopts a one-sided perspective that views masculinity through a lens of oppression. It attempts to link the actions of figures like Harvey Weinstein to the behavior of every man at a suburban cookout. This logic is bigoted; it assigns collective guilt for the actions of a few moral deviants. Sargon of Akkad correctly identifies this as a lack of empathy for the male experience. Women who grew up without brothers often misinterpret play-fighting as genuine aggression, and this misunderstanding has been codified into corporate policy. A Bottom-Up Path to Growth True personal growth doesn't come from top-down authoritarian rules dictated by those who don't understand you. Resilience and character are built through a bottom-up approach within the culture itself. We should encourage honor, decorum, and the protection of the vulnerable rather than suppressing the masculine urge for competition. When we tell men they are innately defective, we don't fix society; we simply create a generation of men who feel alienated and misunderstood. The path forward is not to be less masculine, but to be more intentionally so.
Kim Gehrig
People
- Mar 14, 2020
- Jan 21, 2019