Talk:Dove (brand)

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This article seems to end as an advert for the product. Should someone clean this up?Gavin


"use models who are old, ugly or overweight"

GIVE ME A BREAK. they advertise using beautiful girls and women who happen to not have the luxury of a personal trainer, personal chef, stylist, botox-er, etc. the comment is in complete dissonance with dove's campaign for real beauty. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 216.93.226.98 (talk • contribs)

That last paragraph had to go, unilever can post it in www.marketingpedia.com —Preceding unsigned comment added by Will83 (talkcontribs)

[edit] 2006 "Real Beauty" ad campaign

Well-targeted ads, possibly usable for article expansion (since it's still a stub and all)? ~Kylu (u|t) 05:18, 19 October 2006 (UTC)

I read somewhere that Dove is part of the same company as Axe- the spray that will make tiny half naked models jump you- so their campaign for Real Beauty is clearly based on a monetary agenda rather than actual social change. Has anyone else heard or seen this? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 99.246.50.233 (talk) 19:47, 26 May 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Broken article

Bold claims without proper citation, and it's written like a blog. Also, I don't see how a blogger's(Jason Kottke) opinion is notable. Finally, sign your comments. --154.5.63.254 (talk) 07:57, 12 April 2008 (UTC)