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Oral-Me: Just what were they thinking of? |
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Tuesday, 08 April 2008 08:37am |
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©New
Straits Times (Used by permission)
KUALA TERENGGANU: Oral-me? A Malaysian-made toothpaste is raising eyebrows due
to its suggestive brand name.
Melissa Leong, 28, from Sabah, said the brand name carried a
sexual connotation.
"It's crude. It sounds like a statement more than anything else. Manufacturers
should think twice before naming their products."
Kuala Lumpur-based advertising executive Martin Voon asked if the manufacturers
understood the product name while coining it.
"I'm shocked. These kind of words are normally found on a spoof, but this is an
actual product.
"I'm glad I don't have children as it would be difficult to
explain that it is a joke," he said.
Kieran Sharkey, an English teacher at a college in Sabah, said the name did not
carry a positive connotation.
"With all the information available to the younger generation, I feel that they
can interpret it wrongly."
Consumers Association of Penang research officer Hatijah Hashim wondered how the
brand name could have been approved since it carried a pornographic connotation.
"It should not be allowed in the market. I wonder what the people in charge had
in mind when they came up with the name."
Pro Dental B Corporation Sdn Bhd executive director Sunny Saw saw nothing wrong
with the name as it was connected to oral care.
"The name is just to show that it is an oral product."
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If its just a name, I wonder whether I could open up a hairdressing shop, specialising in the job of blowing hairs. Do you think I should name it "Blow Jobs"?
Nik Elin Zurina Bt Nik Abdul Rashid