Close Reading An Anti-Aging Brand Launch
Introducing "Spoiled Child," and my breakfast. đ¤˘
Oddity, the parent company of makeup brand Il Makiage, has introduced an anti-aging line called Spoiled Child. And the announcement of Spoiled Child has reintroduced my breakfast. đ¤˘
Why does this new brand nauseate me so? Because itâs attempting to frame its antiquated anti-aging message as somehow fresh, empowering, or different from the competition. âThis brand was set up from the beginning to disrupt,â Andrea Gustafson, creative director at Spoiled Child, told Glossy. But to be clear, the only thing different about Spoiled Child is the surface-level language it employs. The ethos behind the brand is the same anti-aging bullshit weâre spoon-fed from the second the aging process begins (birth).
To illustrate my point, I present: a close-reading of the launch announcement! (All quotes in bold are from Glossyâs reporting on the subject, and all critique is directed toward Spoiled Child.)
âWith anti-aging, we saw a pain point of consumers not knowing what they need,â said Oran Holtzman, CEO and co-founder of Oddity.
The pain point of âanti-agingâ is that society treats us like skin-covered garbage-sacks once we reach a certain age. Serum wonât change that!
From a purely physical standpoint, consumers donât know what they âneedâ to treat the signs of aging because most âsigns of agingâ are actually signs of exposure. And you canât treat exposure with more (product) exposure.
The purpose behind the name is to positively challenge the notion and our understanding of aging, according to the brand.
If the products youâre selling aim to eliminate wrinkles, fine lines, age spots, sagging, etc. â and they do! â then you are not âpositivelyâ challenging our understanding of aging, no matter how quirky your ad copy is.
Ad copy irreverently states âYour routine in getting oldâ near subway entrances and âGetting old is getting oldâ on billboards.
âGetting old is getting oldâ sounds sassy⌠but does it do anything to challenge the notion that aging = bad? No. It literally reinforces that notion. âGetting old,â colloquially, means âto be negative and boring or mundane.â âGetting old is getting oldâ = âaging is negative, boring, or mundane.â
The tagline is, âStay immature. Intelligent skin & hair products that refuse to take aging seriously.â
Again, the branding ârefuses to take aging seriously.â The marketing. The copy.
The products, on the other hand â the only part of Spoiled Child that affects the customer in a material way â promise âanti-agingâ and âfewer wrinkles.â They seek to âlift,â ârewind,â âfirm,â and âinstantly transform.â Those are serious (and all too familiar) claims.
Notably, the brand has not employed models in any of its imagery and instead focuses solely on the productsâ capsule-like packaging.
Notably, research shows that model-free beauty advertisements also make people feel awful about themselves! âAfter viewing an advertisement featuring an enhancing product consumers evaluated themselves less positively than after seeing these products when they appeared without the advertising context,â per a study from the Journal of Consumer Research. âConsumers seem to âcompareâ themselves to the product images in advertisements, even though the advertisement does not include a human model ⌠Exposure to beauty-enhancing products in advertisements lowered consumers' self-evaluations, in much the same way as exposure to thin and attractive models in advertisements has been found to lower self-evaluations.â
âThere have been some [major] cultural shifts over the last few years that are not being addressed by any legacy brands, namely that younger consumers are interested in [anti-aging], too,â said Gustafson.
The fact that younger consumers are interested in anti-aging does not mean they need anti-aging products. It means we need to address the fucking hellhole of fear and self-hatred that is Western beauty culture.
âA wide range of people wants to have this aging conversation differently,â Gustafson said.
Yup! And Spoiled Child is not doing that.
And brands like Tula or the beauty publication Allure magazine have opted to change the structure of how they talk about aging, either by using the term âpro-agingâ or by outright banning anti-aging language.
Yup! And the words they use instead all mean the same thing.
Gustafson said that Spoiled Child is trying to introduce the term âage controlâ into the conversation as a way to frame the topic in a modern way.
Whew. OK. Now weâre getting somewhere. Attempting to exert control over the uncontrollable is an emotional coping mechanism, and not a particularly healthy one. You are a force of nature. Your skin is a force of nature. You will age. It will age. You canât control that. (As I say in my sign-off for The Donât Buy List, âYouâre gonna die someday no matter how young you look.â)
And anyway, âage controlâ really isnât any different than âanti-aging.â âControllingâ aging is just as unrealistic as stopping it. It communicates the same concept: that you canât trust your body or your skin;Â that the natural progression of life is somehow shameful; that you need to hold onto your youth with a death grip in order to be beautiful, valuable, worthy, happy, whole.
It also presumes that humans know how to control aging⌠which we do not. At all. Thatâs why there are so many anti-aging products on the market, and why consumers are never satisfied enough to stop buying and trying new ones. If a single product or ingredient worked â even one! â âanti-agingâ wouldnât be such a huge sector.
â[âAnti-â terminology] doesnât work for a generation that is pro-future. Theyâre excited about the future. It doesnât resonate with them to be âantiâ anything,â she said.
Note that this is all about terminology to the brand executives. In terms of the ideology behind that terminology, Spoiled Child is selling citizens the same old shit â just in a shiny new sack.
Hi, Jess. I am new to your shores, having sailed over here from Val Monroe's HNTFUYF. Many moons ago, I worked for a major cosmetics company, followed by a stint with a venerable name in fashion. Both places taught me in an oblique way what you're zeroing in on: that there is a stark difference between need and want.
In our hierarchical system of Capitalism, where every single thing about our lives, minds, and bodies ultimately is commoditized and funneled upwards toward, what else? the capital, ie, the "head" of things which is at this point only about .0000001 of us, it is very easy for our brains to bypass any channels of discernment between need and want.
That is because as all the things which sustain us, including all the world's natural resources, but also our minds and bodies, are funneled up the chain of commerce, we are aware that we are diminished and so the closer we can stay to the capital, the safer we feel -- this fear makes us *want* to *need* things, including our beauty or the perception of it as defined by whoever is at the head of the chain.
So, whenever these bullshit artists (some of whom are really just clueless and out of touch more than they are evil, but there is plenty of evil) start crowing about needs, what they are really doing is exacerbating our fears at a reptilian brain level that imminently, we will not have access to the resources we need to survive.
That's the insidious part. It's not just that the industry makes us feel like shit about ourselves and makes us think we not only "crave" their products, but *must*have them, it literally plays into our existential fear that if we do not buy their shit, we will cease to exist.
This, their marketing campaign, is infuriatingâŚfor so many reasons my head is spinning. From infantilism, to talking down to its target audience, to a complete misunderstanding of this generation and cultural moment. What grown ass person who has fought for equal human rights wants to buy a product that is labeled âspoiled child?â And their assertion that âthis generationâ does not want to use the term âanti?â What?! Have they met a teenager or young adult growing up in this current geo-political moment? I have a teenager and 1. They do not feel excited or hopeful in the current trajectory of âtheir future,â 2. No âproductâ is going to change that, and 3. They are very very âantiâ a whole shitload of things..from anti-racism to anti-capitalism and every âantiâ in between.
Is it wrong for me to want capitalism (in its current nearsighted and unequal mutated-marketing iteration) to implode in on itself? Because THAT is what this âcampaignâ ignites in me: infuriated nihilism.