An ad featuring the humongous likeness of a scantily-dressed woman crawling over a pool table has caught the ire of a group of concerned citizens who say the advertisement, for an Equinox gym in the D.C. suburbs, is less sexy than troublingly sexist.
Bethesda Now reported on the movement to take down the ad:
A group this weekend began a petition to get the Equinox gym on Bethesda Row to take down a window photo it says degrades women and shouldn’t be used to advertise a fitness facility.Sexism Matters, which launched a blog on Friday, wants the New York-based gym to get rid of the image, which shows a woman in a dress, on her knees on top of a pool table holding a pool stick.
The gym (4905 Elm St.) has windows that face Woodmont Avenue, where the photo has been placed. The ad campaign invited controversy from the beginning, when it was introduced early last year.
Sexism Matters started a petition on Change.org to have the ad removed from the building -- in the petition, the group explains their trouble with the billboard:
Our daughters and sons walk by the billboard outside Equinox Gym every day. They see a woman in a degrading sexual position, being "celebrated" for her hypersexualized and supposed dexterity, with a pool cue and balls. This is somehow meant to advertise for a fitness facility.Our children shouldn't be subjected to this. Our female friends and family shouldn't be viewed like this, nor forced to conform to it. Our male partners and colleagues shouldn't be boxed in to thinking this is normal. This is the kind of not-so-subtle sexism that infects our culture, and degrades an entire gender.
We work out to stay healthy. We go to the gym to become stronger. We celebrate our bodies' abilities on the track, in the pool, and on the court. We do NOT accept the excuses. We will NOT tolerate this billboard. And, we will NOT be joining your gym. We are all too busy working, running, teaching, living, and laughing to be seen as objects.
The photo on the billboard display was taken by the famously divisive photographer Terry Richardson, and is one of a number of ads by the photographer for Equinox that have incited controversy.
As The Huffington Post's Ellie Krupnick put it in January 2012, "As advertising for a fitness center, the whole endeavor seems misguided. Sure, the photos are eye-catchingly sexy. But how exactly are they promoting fitness? And what does sex have to do with it? And moreover, why are the women so darn skinny and waif-like?"
By Tuesday afternoon, more than 300 people had signed the online petition, while on Twitter, opinions seemed about equally divided as to whether the billboard should stay or go.
Then one observer noticed something else that might be off about the ad:
She needs to have at least 1 foot on the floor to make that shot! MT “@ABC7News: A controversial billboard: http://t.co/ioweTfL4U3”
— Gregory R. Milas (@GRMilas) July 1, 2013
via http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/07/02/sexy-equinox-ad-bethesda_n_3535059.html?utm_hp_ref=healthy-living&ir=Healthy%20Living
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