Tuesday, June 1, 2010
things that shouldn't be
These make me so angry, I can't even express it without placing an R rating on method lust. And we all know R ratings are dirty (in the words of a certain brand we all know and love!) Seriously, these. make. me. so. angry. - It's a complete waste. I'm so disgusted at this point with the Big Brands uncanny ability to make anything look disgusting in order to sell their products for "healthy living." (To which it actually creates the opposite.)
Ultimatemoneyblog.com actually spells it out perfectly for me:
"The other day I was reading a magazine and came across an advertisement for new Kleenex disposable hand towels. After I got over the initial disgust, I decided to check them out and see what Kleenex has to say about them. On their website, they state that “your hands are only as clean as the towel used to clean them.” “A clean, fresh towel every time.” Come on! If you’re really that scared of germs, you need more than disposable hand towels.
Here are the problems I have with disposable hand towels:
+ They consume more resources
+ They create more waste
+ They teach people (and children) that disposable is better
+ They are pointless
It just sickens me to think that a huge corporation like Kleenex would produce and market a product like this. With all the natural resources being consumed, the last thing we need is another disposable product, especially one that is pretty much useless and replaces something that has worked well for so many years."
Mother Nature Network has this to say:
"A clean, fresh towel every time. It sounds nice but it's a bit of a nightmare in reality.
Kleenex is trying to market the idea that we should now be using one-use disposable (Kleenex brand) hand towels instead of the cotton reusable hand towels found in most homes.
I'm a pragmatic greenie, I've been known to use a paper towel every now and then, but this is just too much. Does everything in our lives need to be disposable?
If you're in the marketing department of companies like Kleenex the answer is very much "yes".
I agree with my buddy David over at Green for Good who called this one out for the eco-dud that it is. He wrote:
In the hand drying facts on their Web site, Kleenex tries to scare us into believing that “regular washing of cloth hand towels does not ensure cleanliness.”
Wow, we should really start wearing disposable clothes if that's true.
To make matters worse, the geniuses at Kimberly-Clark have chosen Earth Month to launch a major television ad push for Kleenex hand towels. Of course, they depict normal hand towels as disgustingly as possible by showing everyone, even the family dog, getting their dirty mitts all over them.
And how cute is this? Kleenex has penned an educational Drying Song to teach your kids how to be wasteful too. Because “no yucky old towel’s gonna ruin my day.”
Sorry Kleenex, but it’s our Earth Day that you’re ruining. Sigh.
Here's the lyrics for their Hand Washing Song:
My hands are gonna be clean
When I wash and I dry with mommy and sing
This song that's exactly two clean hands long
Warm water and soap and bubbles that shine
A Kleenex® Hand Towel that's mine all mine
And a song that's exactly two clean hands long
No yucky old towel's gonna ruin my day
I dry my hands the Kleenex® towel way
So if you're a fan of clean hands too
Roll up your sleeves and I'll sing with you.
I'm going to point this to my two young daughters for the shady marketing-to-kids that it is. I mean, come on - do we really want to train our children to desire a one-use throw-away hand towel?"
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It's time we stopped showing the next generation that disposal is ok. Cause it ain't, ok?
And yes, Colgate Wisp, I'm talking to you, too.
Get some gum already, girl. Geesh.
All of you, you make me sick. Get out of my face. The article above is right on the money. It's time Big Brand became responsible for their actions, and what they produce. I'm completely over the whole "we just make what people want." Cause trust me, as time has gone by I've learned something profound. What people (usually) want, is not what people (usually) need. Well, at least when it comes to convenience products. People will be lazy, until you make them be otherwise. (In Nathan's humble opinion.)
Thoughts? (I know you got some!)
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And don't even get me started on this...
Labels:
colgate wisp,
environment,
green,
kleenex hand towels,
paper towels,
waste
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6 comments:
Yeah, I was really shocked that anyone would think that disposable hand towels are a good product to come out with in this economy, not to mention that it's hip and trendy to be green right now.
My first thought was, really, with all the eco-friendly stuff going on right now, (even I'm starting to feel hit over the head with it all the time) who is the marketing genius who thought THIS would be a successful product??
Seems ready to go straight to Big Lots, I predict. : )
And love your comment about the Wisp - "get some gum already, girl!" LOL!!!
Haha, Nathan, I saw the Kleenex disposable towel commercial and seriously wondered when it would be mentioned on methodlust. How ridiculous. Being "green" was so 2008, apparently.
My husband and I quit paper towels in our house and we both somehow survived the great swine flu epidemic of 2009 (despite working in a hospital during the time when everyone went to the ER for the slightest cough or sneeze) and we both managed to make it through through the entire cold season sniffle free, even with all those horrrrible germs deviously lurking on our grimy, plague-ridden hand towels. You know. The ones we use AFTER washing our hands.
As for the Kleenex Hand Towels, has Kleenex not heard of "doing laundry?" My towels get washed weekly. So, let's see:
1.) Wash hands (removing gunk, grime and germs)
2.) Dry my clean hands on a clean towel.
I see no need to disposable Kleenex towels. What a bad idea. And Rebecca, I think you're right; We'll soon be seeing these things at Big Lots.
Now, about that "Lysol No Touch Hand Soap System." I must admit I have an automatic soap dispenser in the kitchen I bought at Target. I think Lysol tried to play on the Simple Human brand (or in my case Michael Graves one I got for $20) soap dispensers. The downfall I see is a lot of waste. You have to use Lysol's bottles to refill them. With mine and other refillable designs like Simple Human, they can be refilled by buying the large refill bags of Method hand soap. Less waste. Eco friendly.
I also have a Simple Human no touch soap pump I refill with Method soap
It's great in the kitchen because you can do things like get your chicken ready and not worry you just got some kind of germ all over your pump when your hands are messy. However it lasts me ages and I am certainly not running out for soap all the time(but when I do its always a Method pouch)
And since I have properly washed my hands I just dry them with my towel which I wash and reuse I feel pretty confident I do not have germ coated hands.
Honestly if someone was that germaphobic about their hand towel I would think they would save up and get a Dyson Airblade or something .....but since people have lasted this long without disposable hand towels somehow - I think we are all going to be ok.
Get a grip Kleenex - and a spare hand towel to swap out when your other one is in the wash.
I bought one of the Lysol handsoap dispensers with the full intention of hacking it and refilling it with Method soap. I'm so often up to my elbows in sauces in the kitchen that I wanted a hands-free dispenser and Lysol gave me a coupon that made the dispenser about $4- which was in my budget, unlike the Simple Human one. Haven't had time to try to refill the little dispenser thingie yet. Will report back on whether it works. Sadly my favorite Method scent, Mandrin Mango, doesn't have a refill.
The Kleenex handtowels make me want to vomit.
Yeah, I thought the Kleenex handtowel commercial was a joke at the beginning. Sigh.
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