'Shit Girls Say' Returns for One More Episode, and It's a Hair Commercial

Those of you who’ve been pining for another episode of Shit Girls Say are in luck: Graydon Sheppard and Kyle Humphrey’s amusing web series, based on the popular Twitter account, just did a spot for haircare brand Aussie—in the same style as their unbranded videos.

Sheppard directed the ad and is also the star, donning a wig and narrating common hair woes. (We’re told mcgarrybowen was the agency.)

“I can’t it wet!” he complains. “This looks stupid.” “Does this look dumb?”

Aussie recently conducted a #hairprobs survey, which found:

• Women run late an average of one day per week due to hair drama.
• One third of moms (35 percent) say their hair requires more time than their kids in the morning.
• 40 percent of women under 40 cried at least once over their hair in the past six months.
• Nearly a quarter (23 percent) of women under age 40 think that while having sex, a partner ruining their hair would be worse than a partner who can’t perform.
• Seven percent of women admit to avoiding getting intimate altogether to preserve their hairstyle.
• Women spend 20 minutes per day on their hair, translating to a full work week each year.

If you think most of these stats are hard to believe, I’m with you. Who are these people?

Stats aside, the video itself is fun—relatable and entertaining. It ends with Aussie encouraging women to #DitchtheDrama and their complex hair routines (with a shampoo plus conditioner combo product and a dry shampoo) in exchange for “fully living life.”

Which also means not crying over your hair or thinking about it during sex, probably.



This Shampoo Ad Is Lovely and All, but Can It Really Stop Couples From Getting Divorced?

If you’re looking for a “no more tears” kind of shampoo commercial, I’d skip this nearly five-minute Chinese ad for Procter & Gamble’s Rejoice from Leo Burnett Hong Kong. It’s all about making viewers cry over true love … and silky, shiny hair!

Filmed in lush black and white by director David Tsui, the spot—a sensation in Asia, with this version reportedly being viewed more than 40 million times in the past month—tells the story of a young couple on the brink of divorce. The wife agrees to separate on one condition—that she and her husband share one hug a day for a month.

The first hug takes place at a rooftop lounge, high above the city, where he proposed; the second on a windswept pier where he professed his love; the third at a secluded spot where they first kissed.

We’re about four hankies in by this point. Will they get back together? C’mon, dude. Thanks to Rejoice, she’s got smooth, luminous hair, so stop being such a jerk!

In the end, the commercial notes that 3 million couples divorced in China last year (official statistics put the number around 3.5 million, an almost 13 percent increase over 2012), while there were about 100,000 reconciliations. The spot is part of the brand’s “Smooth Heart Touching Moments” campaign, supported by the #IBelieveInLoveAgain hashtag.

Can a shampoo ad boost those reconciliation numbers? Terence Lam, P&G’s haircare marketing manager for Greater China, says: “We believe that no matter how complicated relationships can be, there’s always a way to smooth things up. As a brand devoted to smoothness and love, this is a position worth taking, having a strong point of view on this cultural phenomenon.”

On the one hand, the commercial is poignant and well made. Though manipulative in the extreme, it packs more emotional punch than your typical American romantic date film, and it has clearly made an impact for the brand. That said, there’s something about equating haircare products with love and relationships—let alone divorce—that doesn’t sit right. It feels regressive, and perhaps even talks down to its audience. (The brand has been supportive of Chinese women, though, working with a local organization to help them start businesses.)

What bugs me most is the way the guy soulfully strokes his wife’s hair with each hug. OK, this is, ultimately, a hair products commercial, and at first it seems natural. But it grows distracting and creepy. He seems to have some kind of follicle fixation. Maybe she’d be better off washing him out of her hair after all.



Demented Shampoo Ad From Japan Has Everyone Screaming, Including Viewers

When you think about all the people you need to appease in life, it can get pretty hairy. Your parents, your friends, your significant other, your boss, your co-workers—it’s rough.

Well, here’s a commercial that sympathizes, and presents a unique solution.

The downright hare-brained spot comes to us from Japanese shampoo brand Mesocare and agency Dentsu. It plays out like Rodgers and Hammerstein‘s insane night terror, and will freak you out, too. So, without further hairdo, watch people scream at each other while dangling from hair follicles.

Via Ads of the World.

And here’s the extended cut (no subtitles), which is worth it for the ending alone:

CREDITS
Client: Mesocare
Agency: Dentsu, Tokyo
Creative Director: Yosuke Hiraishi
Copywriter: Yuto Ogawa
Director: Wataru Sato
Photographer: Onomichi
Producers: Sumina Sugita, Tomomitsu Nakano, Yuki Awatsu, Naomi Yamamoto



This Hair Clip Can Saw Rope, Tighten Screws and Measure (Tiny) Things

The MacGyver of hair clips has been created. Not only does it keep your hair from falling in your face during Pilates, but it’s also a flat-head screwdriver, ruler, wrench and teeny-tiny saw.

Oh, and it’s … kind of ugly.

The Leatherdos is a cool idea, but realistically, it’s going to get treated like all of the other hair clips and bobby pins. They slip into couch cushions. They get eaten by pillows. They find pretty much any excuse to vanish. But maybe there’s a sect of women who are really good at keeping track of their hair accessories, and my cynicism toward the Leatherman-on-your-head is unwarranted.

For $10, you can pin back a cowlick with a tool set capable of loosening a bolt, measuring … something really small and sawing yourself to freedom if you end up in a 127 Hours sort of situation.

Via Gizmodo.



Unilever Shampoo Gives You Hair So Strong, You Can Make Violin Bows Out of It

When you hear the words human hair orchestra, don't you just imagine Hannibal Lecter conducting? Not so for this Unilever-sponsored stunt in the Philippines from JWT Singapore and JWT Manila. To show the strengthening effect of its Cream Silk hair-care line, the marketer enlisted a custom bow-maker and used human hair washed with the products instead of the usual horsehair to string four violin bows. An all-female quartet then used them to play 40 songs over four hours in a busy Manila mall. They reported no broken strands through the four-set concert, which drew a crowd of more than 600 people. The live music's lovely, and the idea's unique, but doesn't the whole thing have a slightly creepy it-puts-the-conditioner-on-its-head vibe?