Staff Reporters
Aug 12, 2019

Removal of condom ads in Shenzhen sparks widespread discussion

A metro station in the southern Chinese city was heavily covered with Okamoto adverts — but these were later pulled down.

Removal of condom ads in Shenzhen sparks widespread discussion

“What a mysterious country,” one netizen commented on the social media platform Weibo after adverts for the Japanese condom brand Okamoto, which had covered the ceiling and walls of a metro station in the Chinese city of Shenzhen, were pulled down recently following complaints.

About a week before China’s Valentine’s Day (also named Qixi), which fell on August 7 this year, Shenzhen’s Houhai station was heavily covered with the condom brand adverts. Despite the fact that there were no overtly sexual images in the ads, they prompted many complaints to the Shenzhen Metro, according to China’s media outlet Southern Weekly magazine

One of Okamoto's condom ads in Shenzhen Houhai metro [Photo: Southern Weekly Weibo account]

A Shenzhen citizen surnamed Feng told Southern Weekly that when he exited Houhai metro station recently with his child, he noticed that many parents also taking their children through that station seemed uneasy and awkward seeing the ads. He was quoted as saying that brands should be more careful where to put up controversial adverts, as metro stations have a large pedestrian flow and the ads may not be suitable for some passengers (like children).

However, the act of taking down the ads has also sparked widespread discussion on Weibo, attracting over 300,000 engagements, with the majority of users supporting the advert.

A Weibo user named "卑微的Egbert想上学" commented: “Hospitals that specializes in circumcision and abortion surgeries can sponsor TV series, how come condoms that protect people from diseases cannot make ads. Plus [Okamoto] ads are so beautiful.” The user added: “Please those with eye disease go to the doctor,” apparently implying that the people who complained had something wrong with their eyes. 

Photo: Southern Weekly Weibo account
 
On the contrary, other users said they didn't mind condom ads in public areas but felt there were too many in Houhai metro station.
 
A user named “无锡小透明” said to other Weibo users: “Please pay attention to the details of the report. It said ‘all the walls except one side, ground and ceiling of the station have been covered with the condom ads’. It’s visually uneasy. Plus, only one side of the walls is left for promoting spiritual civilization. Does Okamoto want to challenge the Communist Party’s place?”

In fact, many Chinese consumers welcome condom publicity, especially the younger generation. Durex’s Weibo account, for example, has over 3 million followers and each post attracts thousands of engagements.

By contrast, Okamoto has 170,000 followers on Weibo. Perhaps it needs to more carefully consider how to target its audience next time. 

Source:
Campaign Asia

Follow us

Top news, insights and analysis every weekday

Sign up for Campaign Bulletins

Related Articles

Just Published

21 hours ago

Coachella: The California music festival-turned ...

Reflecting on memory-making brand moments from 818 Tequila, Neutrogena, Pinterest and more as we head into Coachella weekend two.

21 hours ago

Clicks, consent, and conscience: Marketing to the ...

With livestream restrictions and content filters rising, marketers are rethinking their strategies about connecting with the youth, while keeping trust and ethics front and center.

21 hours ago

Bats, reels, and buys: The new IPL media mix

From creator collabs to AR chefs, IPL 2025 proves brands must chase relevance across memes, match breaks, and micro-moments—not just media buys.

21 hours ago

Omnicom Media Group consolidates influencer ...

Creo to operate influencer capabilities across 40-plus markets select markets, while select markets like the UK will operate as OMGCreo.