What if fashion ads objectified men the same scary way they do women?
What if they made men look cheekily at the camera while posing with their legs open or “sexily” drop their pants and wink at the camera?
It’s the question posed in an essay on sexism for social activism and news website, Take Part.
Writers Holly Eagleson and Lauren Wade tackled the question by remaking controversial fashion ads, replacing female models with male ones.
The result is hilarious and very disturbing.
Illustrated by Lauren Wade
The pair focused on two of the creepiest men in the US fashion industry, American Apparel founder Dov Charney and alleged sex offender photographer Terry Richardson.
“I think photoshopping men’s faces and bodies into these ads points a finger at how ridiculously demoralising they really are,” Wade told The Huffington Post.
“My hope in pointing this finger is to spark and keep a conversation going—especially amongst women. I think as a whole we’ve just gotten used to seeing women depicted this way and the only way we can change it is if we stop staying silent and demand change.”