The #HoldACokeWithYourBoobsChallenge was started by model Gemma Jaxx and her colleague Danny Frost, who work for an adult talent-scouting company, as a joke.
Now, it has morphed into a breast cancer awareness drive described by
Playboy as the “sexiest breast cancer awareness campaign to date” (sic).
The ‘challenge’ is exactly what it sounds like - asking users to post
selfies while they hold a Coke (can or bottle) with their breasts. And
most of the pictures are exactly as NSFW
as you’d expect.
While the hashtag was apparently started as a way to mock social media campaigns such as the
Kylie Jenner lips challenge, it caught on and Frost and Jaxx claim people began to mention breast cancer awareness while posting pictures.
“We never thought it would take off like it did. But it did. And then
people started posting it was for charity and it was for breast cancer
awareness. We had never plan on that nor thought of it. But since that’s
what people want to do it for, we said why not do something good with
this. So we went with it. Please challenge your friends to do it,” they
said in a joint
Facebook post.
Jezebel
had a different take on the challenge, noting: “We are already aware of
breast cancer and taking off your shirt isn’t going to make us any more
aware of it.”
The site also questioned whether the challenge’s association with
breast cancer was as organic as Frost and Jaxx describe, saying “the
only time I saw anything really relating to breast cancer awareness was
on a Russian woman’s Instagram”.
Much has been written in the past of the dangers of sexualising
breast cancer, with Karuna Jagger of the American advocacy group Breast
Cancer Action saying
in 2012:
“The implicit message in these campaigns is that it is breasts that are
sexy; sexy is what is important; and we should care about breast cancer
because it takes those lovely, sexy breasts out of the world.”
A spokesperson for Breast Cancer Care, however, said we should
celebrate that the internet offers opportunities for people to raise
awareness.
It is brilliant that the internet and social media give people the
tools and opportunity to create their own campaigns to raise awareness
and funds for charities. But this is not a campaign we are involved
with.
However they added: “There’s nothing sexy about going through breast cancer”:
Hm…
More: A genderless underwear company is using breast cancer survivors as models
Nenhum comentário:
Postar um comentário