Description
In India, men’s skincare has always been a cultural contradiction. Popular culture has long celebrated the rugged, low-maintenance male who “doesn’t need” self-care. Using face wash was often mocked. Despite being the leading men’s face wash brand; Garnier Men had only 4.1% household penetration. When Anunbhav Singh Bassi, India's top comedian, roasted face wash in a live set, Garnier didn't defend. They recruited him. Not quietly. Publicly. The brand paid the loudest voice against face wash to change his own mind, under the public eye, with the internet watching. 100 comedians from Bassi's own circle piled on. A van followed his tour. Billboards hit his hometown. Live audiences became participants. John Abraham delivered the finale. Our breakthrough insight: men don’t change because brands tell them to. They change when they see someone like them change. Advertising became entertainment with 59M views. 2M interactions. 44% surge in online sales.


