All’s fair in Cosm(et)ic
world!

Then perhaps in 1960s if I remember right came smelly hair
oils in different colours and aromas. Lavender, jasmine, etc. that spread a
heady scent when people applied it and walked around. For women there was just a snow called ‘Afgan’
for whatever reason that was applied to the face & Remy talc. Then a sort of ad revolution
started with one Mr. Farookh Engineer and who claimed to apply certain hair cream,
which perhaps didn’t turn a single hair on his head as he faced the fearsome
Wes Hall and Charlie Griffith and
nonchalantly dispatched their bouncers and beamers to the ropes sending us in the galleries to a
frenzy! This gentleman soon picked a beautiful bride perhaps due to the
enduring cream and settled down in the Down
under.
Naturally we were dying to buy the stuff not
just to improve our cricketing skills but more to attract a pretty lass. But due
to the creams prohibitive cost only my eldest sibling bought it with his first
salary. I secretly tried it for getting the ‘engineer’ effect and got belted
instead by my brother.
That was the last I had anything to do
with dreams of creams & brunettes!
Then in late 70s came hand me downs in the form of shampoos
and sprays that declared to the world that you had NRI siblings! In the 80s there
was a shampoo revolution that ushered in one rupee sachets that promised to
turn your hair into pure velvet! The
Rs.1 sachette completely killed the hand made
soap nut powder and other local
stuff. In one stroke it brought about a social revolution which none of the
government programmes could do in 67 years. The slum dwellers and the
rich and famous were using the same product to enhance their hair into pure velvet . The
manufacturer who toiled for this social service became a multi millionaire and
toast of the town. Of course the water bodies and land have been so ‘shampooed’
that perhaps it will take another millennium to clean it up, if one is serious
about it..
Came marriage. Me and my better half, as we were avowed
critics of consumerism took a vow not to use artificial and smelly cosmetics. Then
came two cute daughters.
As they grew up in the 90s so did electronic and cosmetic business
. One company claimed, that their
application made you turn like snow white of seven dwarfs fame! Their biggest
market was perhaps Tamilnadu. Thus a subtle racist message that white is the
only acceptable colour which was subtle earlier, is now become more sophisticated
and deeply embedded into the psyche of entire South Indian men &
women. People here seriously believe
that a few months of application of these ghastly cosmetics would turn them
into Cinderellas! Women of better
complexion command better matrimonial market and that means fewer dowries! Soon
other companies picked up the cue and improved their strategy and slogan. ‘Lovely’
became ‘glow’ then to ‘healthy’ finally it became ‘herbal’. Soaps were replaced
by ‘wash’. Hand wash, face wash, hair wash then room & car fresheners and
so on. It is no more just a shampoo for your hair. You are advised to use hair
thinners that made your hair hang like straws from a scarecrow. It is not
enough if you brush your teeth with mere paste but should rinse it in a
solution. The process promised to turn your teeth into a torch light when you
smiled! Now the clever of market gurus have made these lotions smell like lime,
orange, vanilla, etc. so much so when I enter the wash room I feel as if I have
entered a juice shop or ice cream parlour!
I was thinking that the ad tsars could think more novel ways
to better their already sky rocketing sales capitalizing on already insecure
consumers. They should perhaps tap the region specific biases by introducing region
specific aroma sprays Which would have the best endorsements. For
eg. In the South, curd rice, masal dosa, bisibela, biryani, sprays that the Dravidian parties would themselves
endorse; in the North , malai kofta, panneer butter masala , dhal makhni , tandoori
chicken sprays that the Badals & Yadavs would swear by; in the East
sandesh, mishti dahi, fish perfumes that didi herself would use and In the west
dhoklas, vadapav perfumes which
Thackerys would embrace, and so on and
so forth. Then the manufacturers can
claim that their intentions are not selfish but purely patriotic!