The American campaign for
The Bacardi-owned Scotch company recruited English actress Claire Forlani last year as a sexy spokesperson who could entice a younger crowd. The British media lampooned Forlani's awful attempt at a Scottish accent in the ads, and pointed out that she even has a Scottish husband.
Dewar's kept her for several ads, and now she returns alongside a new character, the Baron. The Baron is basically a sophomoric version of Dos Equis' "Most Interesting Man in the World," and his misogyny has offended plenty of people already. In this commercial, he intercepts a fat woman to "save" a friend. Dewar's has made the ad private on YouTube, never a good sign.
Here it is, via Vimeo:
New York agency
When they started the campaign, Dewar's assumed their target audience of young American men might need to be coaxed into drinking Scotch, which they may associate with their grandfathers. The theme of the campaign was "irreverence, wit, and wisdom," according to Dewar's vp and brand managing director Arvind Krishnan.
Guys like Fred Minnick, author of "Whiskey Women," finds the Baron ad's irreverence to be going too far.
He admits that the ad probably would have appealed to him as a college kid, but despite its repulsiveness to him as a grown man, he thinks Dewar's is being irresponsible: "If Daniel Tosh or Saturday Night Live made fun of large women, that is within their platform ... The
He wants the ad pulled for discriminating against women and obese people, as does a group of petitioners.
One of the petitioners drew attention to Dewar's British "LIVE TRUE" campaign, which could not be more different from its American counterpart.
This ad, produced by Barcelona agency & Rosas, features the narration of a Charles Bukowski poem inspiring the reader to be true to himself or herself. Its protagonists are very much the anti-Barons: