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Archive for the ‘super duper important’ Category

l’oreal under fire

In beauty, super duper important on 06.25.09 at 8:14 pm

L’Oréal, the French cosmetics giant, whose advertising campaigns proclaim “because you’re worth it”, was found guilty of racial discrimination for considering black, Arab and Asian women unworthy of selling its shampoo.

France’s highest court was told that the group had sought an all-white team of sales staff to promote Fructis Style, a haircare product made by Garnier, L’Oréal’s beauty division.

The word went out that Garnier’s hostesses should be BBR — “bleu, blanc, rouge” — the colours of the French flag. The expression is widely recognised in the French recruitment world as a code for white French people born to white French parents, a court was told, in effect excluding the four million or so members of ethnic minorities in France.

La Cour de Cassation, the equivalent of the US Supreme Court, said that the policy was illegal under French employment law, upholding a ruling given by the Paris Appeal Court in 2007.

The judgment was a significant blow to the image of the world’s biggest cosmetics group, which has spent millions of dollars in global advertising campaigns featuring stars such as Andie MacDowell, Eva Longoria, Penélope Cruz and Claudia Schiffer.

That image already suffered a battering when L’Oréal executives were forced to deny claims that they had lightened the singer Beyoncé Knowles’s skin for a campaign last year. The ruling also hinted at widespread prejudice among French shoppers since L’Oréal believed that they were more likely to buy shampoo from white sales staff, the court was told.

The ruling will fuel anger among black and Arab French people, who complain that they face widespread discrimination when seeking employment.

The court ruled that Adecco, the temporary recruitment agency whose Districom division hired the hostesses, was also guilty of racial discrimination. The Paris Appeal Court had fined both L’Oréal and Adecco €30,000 (£25,500) and ordered them to pay a further €30,000 each in damages to SOS Racisme, the anti-racist campaign group, which brought the case. The court upheld the fines but told the appeal court judges to reconsider the damages.

L’Oréal expressed “disappointment” at the judgment, which ends three years of legal wrangling over the discrimination claims. Adecco declined to comment.

Samuel Thomas, the vice-chairman of SOS Racisme, described the ruling as a “very great victory”. He said: “Whatever the size of the company, none is able to escape prosecution.”

The court was told that a Districom executive had sent a fax to its headquarters in 2000 saying that Garnier’s hostesses should be aged 18 to 22, wear size 38 to 42 clothes (British sizes 8 to 12) and be “BBR”.

Prosecutors said that Garnier wanted to exclude members of the ethnic minorities on the ground that they would be less likely to sell its shampoo in French shops. The court was told that only 4.65 per cent of the hostesses hired for Garnier’s campaign were black, Asian or Arab.

Before the BBR fax went out, the agency had been offering a pool of candidates in which 38.7 per cent were from ethnic minorities, suggesting that they had been blocked during the final stages of recruitment.

Districom employees said that they were given oral instructions to favour white sales staff. But Thérèse Coulange, the deputy managing director of Districom, who sent the fax, said that she had merely wanted hostesses able to “express themselves correctly in French”. She said that the fax had been a personal initiative and not the implementation of company policy.

Laurent Dubois, Garnier’s former managing director, told a lower court that he had “never given the slightest order to discriminate against anyone” and described racial prejudice as “foreign to L’Oréal’s genes”.

[Source: timesonline.co.uk]

Side Dish: R.I.P. Micheal Jackson.

ATTENTION BLACK QUEENS: what are your staples?

In black queen, super duper important on 09.14.08 at 6:17 pm

do you have any must-have, absolutely necessary hair care products? bq wants to know what they are. all black queen members are asked to compose a list of four products at most. preferably, each product should be a shampoo, conditioner, moisturizer, and/or hair styling product, but it’s okay if you don’t have four staples. may be you have a favorite conditioner and moisturizer that you could never live without. or, perhaps you only consider one product to be a necessity. that’s fine, as long as you don’t go over the four product limit. we’re just looking for what’s on the very top of your hair care regime.

why? think of black queen staples as an allure-esque reader’s choice type of thing. i’m curious about which products are the most popular among our community, and i think that future black queen newbies can also benefit from this. one of the most common questions in the message board is: where do i start? if these newly natural members are aware of the most popular products in bq, they will be introduced to products and brand names that are more likely to suit their needs. this is also a way to get current members involved, and who knows? it may teach us a thing or two about products we’ve never heard of.

submission is easy. you can list your favorite products as a comment to this blog entry*, you can email me, or you can respond to the message board thread that i started. for more information on how to submit your staples, click here. if you’re not a member and want to get involved, feel free to join our group. (it’s free, and fun!) i’ll announce a deadline around the end of the month, depending on how many entries i’ve received. so open up your bathroom cabinet, and get cracking!!

*this is meant for black queen members only, but i will accept entries from blackQueen:press readers, and/or new members of the group. while no one is excluded from entering their hair care staples, we ask that you are somehow involved with the group or blog if you choose to submit a list.

Stop the FDA Globalization Act of 2008.

In super duper important on 07.6.08 at 11:17 pm

do you own a small business that manufactures hand-crafted personal care products? do you buy from one of these companies? a few examples are oyin, qhemet, nasabb, sher essence, and blended beauty.

what would you say if congress passed a law that forced these small businesses to pay outrageous prices that would drive most of them out of business? what would you do if you were forced to purchase from mass-market products, because your favorite all-natural moisturizer was no longer available?

our government is trying to make these possibilities a reality, and it needs to be stopped. regardless of whether you produce or purchase anything from small businesses like the ones listed above (or if you do neither), i think we can all agree that it is necessary to have a variety of choices in our daily lives. the FDA wants to limit our choices of products, along with our abilities to start up businesses that provide alternatives to pantene pro-v, garnier fructis, and frizz ease.

don’t let this happen. follow these steps so as to stop the FDA globalization act of 2008:

  • click here for more information on the act and why it is problematic.
  • contact your local members of congress by visiting their homepages and clicking on the “contact” link provided.
    {you can find your senators’ contact information at www.senate.gov, along with your representatives’ information at www.house.gov}
  • send them the petition message provided in the indie business blog, or put it in your own words.
  • contact virgil miller, a professional staff member with the house energy & commerce committee, and tell him the same thing.
  • spread the word!

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proponents of capitalism are quick to mention the fact that a capitalistic environment gives consumers more choices in the marketplace. don’t let this law contradict their claim, and don’t let our government dictate what you purchase.