Dove Campaigns To Restrain Nasty Tweets Against Women At Oscars

On Oscar night, Dove plans to push back against the standard onslaught of superficial -- and mostly female-focused -- scrutiny.

As stars hit the red carpet, on Sunday, the Unilever brand will encourage Twitter users to go easy on the fashion and beauty advice.

The #SpeakBeautiful initiative builds on Dove’s Campaign for Real Beauty, which has been challenging popular perceptions of feminine appeal for more than 10 years.

Jennifer Bremner, director of marketing at Dove, said the effort reflects the brand’s leadership position. “As a beauty brand … we believe it is our responsibility to inspire change for women on social media,” Bremner said. “With #SpeakBeautiful, we are asking women to consider the power of a single social media post.” 

Based on keywords and other tracking analysis, Twitter will work with Dove to identify negative tweets before and during the awards show.

Not long after nasty tweets are posted, Dove plans to tweet non-automated responses, including “constructive and accessible advice” to encourage more positive online language and habits, according to a brand spokeswoman.

Dove’s response team includes “social media and self-esteem experts” who will be ready to fight the good fight in real-time.

Perceived physical flaws are a favorite topic among social media users. By Dove’s count, over 5 million “negative body image” tweets were posted last year.

Even more troubling, four out of every five negative tweets about beauty and body image are from women talking about themselves, according to research commissioned by Dove, and conducted by Danah Boyd, the social media guru and Principal Researcher at Microsoft Research.

“Women today are 50% more likely to say something negative about themselves, than positive, on social media,” according to Bremner. 

Among other social media leaders, Twitter has come under fire for enabling verbal violence and bullying of all kinds. Even Twitter CEO Dick Costolo has acknowledged the problem. “We suck at dealing with abuse and trolls,” Costolo recently admitted in an internal memo. “I’m frankly ashamed of how poorly we’ve dealt with this issue during my tenure as CEO. It’s absurd.”

In its defense, the microblogging leader has endeavored to make its platform a safer, friendlier place for users.

Late last year, Twitter added improvements to its in-product harassment reporting and “block” features. It also set out to improve the reporting process for those users who observe abuse, but aren’t receiving it directly.

To achieve faster response times, Twitter has also recently made some back-end improvements to the tools and processes that are designed to review reported Tweets and accounts.

5 comments about "Dove Campaigns To Restrain Nasty Tweets Against Women At Oscars ".
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  1. Jonathan Hutter from Northern Light Health, February 20, 2015 at 4:38 p.m.

    While this is an admirable idea for overall discussion, I'm scratching my head at why they are implementing it towards an industry and event that celebrates the superficial. What is the purpose of the red carpet procession and posing for photography except to exclaim, "look how I look!"?

  2. Gregory Harmon from Media Consultant, February 20, 2015 at 4:41 p.m.

    That is the best censorship idea I've heard this week.

  3. Stephen Rappaport from SDR Consulting LLC, February 20, 2015 at 5:42 p.m.

    I'm not sure I understand this initiative. The article cites research stating that 80% of women are likely to say something negative about themselves. Shouldn't Dove's 'social media and self-esteem experts' focus on them?

  4. Paula Lynn from Who Else Unlimited, February 20, 2015 at 7:01 p.m.

    Look how many people don't have anything much better to do with their lives. Bet some dedicated organizations could use some volunteer help. Go help someone if you have nothing better to do. Read a book. I certainly don't a flying anything about what the audience says, but get annoyed at seeing that crap when I paid to what programming. They have something advantageous to say and sell. Buy an ad. May Dove continue to eliminate the vultures.

  5. Jonathan Hutter from Northern Light Health, February 23, 2015 at 2:15 p.m.

    I checked into this last night. Does anyone count whether how many of these tweets are done by real people who believe in this, and how many are done by people who are paid to tweet? That would include commercial interests outside of Dove as well as their own.

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