That is vile. I can imagine the women who are shy about cervical examination, often from religious groups, are going to be even more put off by that kind of advertising.
They don’t know what a woman is, and yet somehow the legs are all presented in an unmistakably, stereotypically female/feminine way. Why not have a set of unshaven legs wearing trainers? They could say it represented the men who need their cervix checked…
The executives who created and approved those ad campaigns should be fired.
Jeez, what happened to frank statements of medical things in ordinary English?
That is vile. I can imagine the women who are shy about cervical examination, often from religious groups, are going to be even more put off by that kind of advertising.
They don’t know what a woman is, and yet somehow the legs are all presented in an unmistakably, stereotypically female/feminine way. Why not have a set of unshaven legs wearing trainers? They could say it represented the men who need their cervix checked…