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Did this female flashmob in Lahore send the wrong message about empowerment?

Do you think this viral ad was effective ?

  • Yes

    Votes: 12 16.0%
  • No

    Votes: 47 62.7%
  • It's confusing

    Votes: 16 21.3%

  • Total voters
    75
I approve savage dancing.. but keep it PG 13 .......
 
The internet seems to think so. We ask the brand behind the viral video for their take on the issue.
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Does dancing on the streets empower women? In Pakistan, some say yes, many beg to differ.

Of late, fashion brands have been trying to stand out amongst the herd by coming up with creative ideas to market their companies, and one such brand is Do Your Own Thing. For an out-of-the-box idea, DYOT hired two NCA students to choreograph a flashmob of five girls dancing to Beyoncé's Run The World (Girls) on the streets of Lahore.

The two-minute clip starts with a woman throwing her chaddar to the ground and breaking into a dance after being teased by a male passerby. Seconds later she is followed by four other girls who copy her dance routine.



Does dancing on the streets empower women? In Pakistan, some say yes, many beg to differ.

Of late, fashion brands have been trying to stand out amongst the herd by coming up with creative ideas to market their companies, and one such brand is Do Your Own Thing. For an out-of-the-box idea, DYOT hired two NCA students to choreograph a flashmob of five girls dancing to Beyoncé's Run The World (Girls) on the streets of Lahore.
The two-minute clip starts with a woman throwing her chaddar to the ground and breaking into a dance after being teased by a male passerby. Seconds later she is followed by four other girls who copy her dance routine.
Hours after being posted on Facebook, the video caught the attention of many on social media and instantly received flak for portraying #feminism and #empowerment in the wrong light.
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For most, the video failed to portray women's rights in a positive light.

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Feminist collective Girls At Dhabas took issue with the video as well, but their post has since been removed from Facebook.However, one Facebook commentator highlighted that women face different struggles and should not be judged according to one scale or set of values.

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But was the idea behind the flashmob to highlight empowerment and feminism? The co-manager of Do Your Own Thing (DYOT) steps in to explain his point of view.

"Our brand is about customization. Our customers can change our designs to suit them, which hasn't been done before in Pakistan," he tells Images.

He adds, "We are a small brand, we can't afford billboards so we wanted to make a viral video. We watched a lot of videos to get inspiration and [finally] reached out to to students from NCA, Saad and Ikram, to help us. Saad managed the choreography and Ikram was the DOP. We shot the film in Anarkali in Lahore, which is next to NCA."

Though many may associate DYOT's video with a recent campaign launched by a local clothing brand under hashtag #ReclaimPublicSpaces, the co-manager dismisses that relation entirely.

"We didn't do this to 'reclaim space,' and we don't claim to be making a stand for women's empowerment through this video. Our brand's perspective is that you should 'do your own thing,' and no one should bother anyone else for how they choose to express themselves," he says.

He admits they were anticipating a response, but not the one they received. He explains, "We expected some kind of reaction to the video, of course, but in hindsight I wish this many men hasn't seen it and commented on it. And then, very soon women started commented on it also, and many said 'this is not empowerment'."

"Well, we're not telling other girls to dance in the streets, but if these girls wanted to dance, why shouldn't we let them? After the video there has been a lot of judgment on the internet about what women 'should' and 'shouldn't' do - isn't that also negative? Why should women be told what they should and shouldn't do?" he questions.

"If I had to use a hashtag to answer to criticism to the video it would be #LetThemBe. If somebody wants to dance, let them," he says.

While it's true that the worth of the ad's final message is debatable, we wonder — does everyone criticising the ad saying that it encourages immoral behaviour or 'isn't ladylike' realise that they're applying to these women the same moral framework of 'achi larki/ buri larki' that allows patriarchal norms to flourish in Pakistan and police women's behavior?

Something to think about!

http://images.dawn.com/news/1176198

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Saw the video on you tube. Why are Pakistanis so pissed off ? 4 girls dressed gracefully dancing on a street is a major problem ? Why ?

But the dance was :sick:
 
We should empower desi women so that they equally contribute toward rent, utility bills, food, shopping, education of children etc instead of sitting at home and watching SAAS BAHU serials ..aqal thikane a jahey ghi aur sara nasha utar jahey ga feminism ka aur equality ka

Women don't want to do all this. They want equality and freedom only when it benefits them but don't want to share the burdens and responsibilities that comes with it.
 
The fallacy of your argument is shown clearly and easily by progressive societies in the present day world, where everybody has the equal right to live as they please, without impinging on the rights of others to do so as well. The situation you are trying to describe arises only where some take it upon themselves to force their views on everyone else under the pretext of freedom of views, and cry foul when stopped since they deny other the rights they want for themselves. There is a distinct and clear difference.

and yet I've used evidence from one of the very same "progressive societies" to make my point. However I do get your point which is basically that it's individuals enforcing their views on others however the system by and large stands for "live and let live" right ? -- explains why two different individuals will get different jail times for a similar crime ... simply based simply on their gender ..
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/09/11/men-women-prison-sentence-length-gender-gap_n_1874742.html

If thats not systemic enough, well how about racist lending practices to minorities in the same "progressive modern society" ...
http://www.theatlantic.com/business...ending-practices-were-fueled-by-greed/250424/

"Equality" and "Live and let live" at its finest I must say. That too after 15 democratic (liberal) presidents ... :lol:
 
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