Supermarket chain Circle K apologises for 'sexist' Secretary Day condom and wine offer

Spokesperson from Circle K says company ‘deeply regrets’ advert

Katie O'Malley
Thursday 18 July 2019 12:24 EDT
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Condom with a glasses of liquor on white background
Condom with a glasses of liquor on white background (iStock)

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An international supermarket chain has apologised on Twitter after urging customers to buy a sexist “combo” offer for female secretaries which included a bottle of wine and condoms.

On Tuesday, the company Circle K posted the advert – which has since been removed from its social media platforms – encouraging shoppers to mark “Secretary Day” in Mexico with the deal.

Circle K’s tweet showed three offers – two included a bottle of wine and a chocolate bar. Meanwhile, a third offered the aforementioned products with the addition of a packet of condoms.

The caption to the tweet, translated from Spanish, read: “Happy Secretary Day.

“Celebrate it with them the proper way with this executive combo.”

The words “if you know what I mean” were also printed on the advert with an illustration of a person in a skirt next to an office chair.

After spotting the tweet, Patricia Mercado, a Mexican senator, shared her outrage at Circle K’s sexist advert on Twitter.

In a series of posts, the politician said that the advert was not only sexist “for reproducing gender stereotypes and misogyny by insinuating that the recognition secretaries deserve is of a sexual nature, but also because it promotes sexual harassment and bullying at work”.

Mercado added: “We need the Mexican business community to engage in the fight to eradicate this type of violence and harassment at work.”

In light of the backlash, a representative from Circle K apologised to the public on Twitter, stating that the company had “taken the necessary measure so something like this does not happen again”.

In a statement translated from Spanish, the spokesperson said that Circle K “deeply regrets” the advert posted on social media and that it never intended “to promote any stereotype”.

Last month, the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) banned all advertising that endorses harmful gender stereotypes in the UK.

The new rules now mean that companies will no longer be able to depict scenes that promote gender stereotypes, such as women doing household chores while their male partners relax with their feet up.

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Other scenarios that will come under fire according to the new guidelines include school girls being shown to be less academic than boys, women struggling to park a car and men having difficulty changing an infant’s nappy.

However, the ASA outlined that the guidance does not prevent advertisers from featuring only one gender, nor does it stop them from showing “glamorous, attractive, successful, aspirational or healthy people or lifestyles”.

The Independent has contacted Circle K for comment.

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