While advertisements bombard us with images of scantily-clad women on a daily basis, there is still a fine line between what is OK and what isn’t. And apparently, for the New York City Subway, that line is the word “period” and a peeled half-grapefruit.
Ads for THINX, a brand of period-proof underwear, were rejected by the advertising contractor for the city’s Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA) after being deemed inappropriate. The ad in question, features images of women (wearing full-covered underwear, tank tops and turtlenecks) juxtaposed with a grapefruit and an egg out of its shell. The slogan states that the underwear is for women or “any menstruating human” with periods or “shedding of the uterine lining”.
A representative for Outfront Media allegedly told THINX CEO Miki Agrawal that the models “seem to have a bit too much skin” and that the egg and fruit seemed “inappropriate”.
“We suggested changes that we felt were appropriate for the riding public and were hoping to work with the advertiser to refine the copy,” the company told Slate in a statement