How are stereotypes perpetuated? How do we ‘assume’ things, habits and traits about people, races or communities? Why is it that this baggage of history is so difficult to toss away?
We in our part of the world, in South Asia especially, are usually seen as classist and even racist in some cases. How widespread this malaise is was revealed recently at Cannes when Sherry Collins, a long-standing advertising practitioner who in 2015 launched Pitch, an independent London-based trade publication.
A woman of colour, three years ago she was solicited by an unnamed man in Cannes, who passing her whispered ‘how much for the night?’ Needless to say she was shocked and upset, and didn’t come out publicly about it. However, whenever she spoke about the incident, she was presented with similar stories by other women of colour, who it was just ’assumed’ belong to a certain profession.
Although she was solicited in Cannes by a person who worked in the industry, the stories that came to her were not restricted to this high-profile event. This year at Cannes she decided to come out and developed an ad in her magazine to highlight the issue, with the hashtag #AssumeNothing. Coming on the heels of the #MeToo, #TimesUp and #NoMore pushback to gender stereotyping, especially sexual harassment, the hard-hitting and direct ad immediately resonated.
The management of the Cannes Lions Festival stepped in to show their support and highlighted the Cannes Code of Conduct, which focuses on actionable alert to such behaviour.
Even if this is just a dent in an industry known for its gender pay gap, misogyny, sexism, harassment and discrimination and there is a long way to go to provide a level playing field, Collins’ #AssumeNothing is a beginning. It has not only blown the cover from how women of colour are perceived in the industry, it has exposed these stereotypes that are dismissive of women’s abilities and realisation of their potential.