The Last Word on Method’s Horny Scrubbing Bubbles



method_loofa.jpg

So Method ran a humorous commercial, called Shiny Suds, showing scrubbing bubbles taunting a naked woman in the shower. After complaints from people who actually likened the spot to condoning rape (we kid you not), Method pulled the commercial. Words fail at this point but we’ll give it a shot:

1. Cause groups and feminist blogging should be outlawed.

2. Everyone with a stick up their ass over this should promptly shove it all the way through until it pops out the top of their head. Hopefully they’ll die and allow the rest of us to “use the loofa” without feeling like we’re being gang raped in the shower. (Where the hell do people come up with this crap?)

3. Brands should grow a pair and proudly lift their middle finger when confronted by a gaggle of idiots who have nothing better to do than to suck the last drop of humor out of life.

4. Just for fun, Dow should hire an army of men in Scrubbing Bubbles costumes, send them to BlogHer (and the rest of the female conference circuit) and have them ejaculate foamy white stuff all over attendees. That ought to get some panties in a bunch.

5. Um… Nope. Got nothing left. Feel free to add your own.

Picture of Steve Hall

Steve Hall

RECENT ARTICLES

TRENDING AROUND THE WEB

8 things naturally classy people do that have nothing to do with money

8 things naturally classy people do that have nothing to do with money

Hack Spirit

Why re-reading a book is not a waste of time

Why re-reading a book is not a waste of time

Global English Editing

What your vocabulary reveals about your habits of attention

What your vocabulary reveals about your habits of attention

Global English Editing

9 things people with old-money manners do that quietly set them apart

9 things people with old-money manners do that quietly set them apart

Hack Spirit

7 things genuinely classy people never brag about

7 things genuinely classy people never brag about

Hack Spirit

The words people choose under pressure — and what they signal to others

The words people choose under pressure — and what they signal to others

Global English Editing