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The Rural Voice, 1980-12, Page 29f� GISELE IRELAND Advertising and the metal muffin brigade Lynne Gordon, Ontario Status of Women Council chairman, states that there will be a change in sexist advertising. This means that no longer will women be sterotyped as mindless morons; men will join the metal muffin brigade too. Advertising of products that women normally use is usually one level above Sesame Street, if that good. What about the cluck who has spent 20 years with fumes in her oven and wants to know if "this is marriage"? Or the detergent commercials where mommy waits at the bottom of the hill for her little darlings dressed in white. They have just slid belly down and rump up down the dirt and mud just so that she can whip the clothes off them and try the new wonder product. I'd wait for them with the wooden cooking spoon, if I was nuts enough to let them wear white shirt and pants while playing outside. Most women are not that hard up for something to do. I wonder how they will get around the sexist role with the disgusting array of products they have for feminine hygiene. I can't see some muscled he man advertising "light -days" napkins, can you? Maybe they could have non -sexed rabbits do it. The preparations sold for that embarrassing itch that no one talked about years ago, still shouldn't be talked about. Who cares where you itch? I don't see them advertising personal hygiene products for men, why pick on us? We are supposed to cream and deodorize every square inch of our delectable bodies so that we will be acceptable to the other half of the population. What is wrong with the smell of cows, or pigs or anything as basic as perspiration anyway? According to these ads I would have to carry around a can of "the dome" with me all day when I work just in case someone comes near me. Men only like women who have shiny teeth, no dandruff and wear a certain kind of perfume. Actually, even without electric hair tweezers and living bras we're not too bad. The one woman in the bra commercials who sticks right out there would be right at home in a high producing herd of Holsteins. And it certainly doesn't take the average mother -to -be agonizing hours or weeks to decide whether to use the containers that mother nature gave her to feed the baby or nipples that look and feel just like the real thing. If she's that indecisive now, imagine the poor kid with wet pants after he's born and she's pouring water on a stack of diapers to find out which one will leave him driest. I am looking forward to seeing a man putting a tough shine on his floors or deciding what to do about spots on the glasses, or better yet, having him model super smooth panties so no bulges will spoil the line of his denims. The commercials could be better entertainment than the shows. rts rstmcviNnexillag gatnsltc crSvibac ORMSWERIMIMMONNVAKII yJ i 1 Lr Lasting ; U CZ L]N BLJS NE 55 MACHINE$ Christmas =L - Gifts Ibta4. A TYPEWRITERS CALCULATORS OFFICE FURNITURE FILING CABINETS STATIONERY PHOTO COPIERS CASH REGISTERS Huron Business Machines 50 ALBERT ST. CLINTON PHONE 482-7338 WOOD BURNING HEATERS Hai,' Hard w ary See our fine line of air -tight, highly -efficient WOOD HEATERS. . . .Some models have glass or cast doors; brick lining; ash pan and automatic thermostat. We also stock KITCHEN RANGES and FIREPLACE INSERTS! J. J. IIAMMER 0 NOME FURNISHINGS NEUSTADT, ONT. PHONE799-5718 THE RURAL VOICE/ DECEMBER 1980 PG. 27