Annie Murphy needs a shave as easy because the margarine she places in her espresso, and Eric Andre wants a hair-removal expertise that’s much less irritating than his “mysterious rash.”
Each beloved comedians, who seem in side-by-side bathe stalls in a brand new BIC marketing campaign, are searching for a technique to unclog—their drains, their in-boxes and, most definitely, their razors.
Murphy and Andre are the latest model ambassadors for BIC, which continues to lean into celebrity collaborations with the likes of Snoop Dogg, Martha Stewart and Willie Nelson, which have moved the needle for the legacy mass-market staple.
To launch its new Simple Rinse razor, the model regarded for relatable expertise to announce a brand new razor with anti-clogging expertise. And in its largest funding within the shave class in a decade, BIC additionally goals to shake up a section that’s usually critical in its advertising messages.
“We had been going for one thing accessible, with tongue-in-cheek humor that might attraction to millennials and Gen Z,” Katty Pien, BIC North America’s vp of selling, advised Adweek. “Celebrities have actually resonated with our shoppers and helped us make the model culturally related.”
Caught on you
Murphy and Andre star in a hero 30-second spot from BIC’s company companion Doner CX, together with 15- and 6-second iterations, all constructed across the actor-comedians showering and shaving in shut proximity.
They’re hawking a product that has a whopping 21 patents and has been in growth for 5 years. It was a client perception—92% of women and men complain about clogged razors—that led to Simple Rinse, in line with Pien.
The clogging situation is a direct results of the well-documented razor wars, Pien defined, with corporations jam-packing their razors with as many as seven blades. Although broadly thought of an development, the blades at the moment are positioned extra intently collectively than ever earlier than, Pien stated, making them more durable to rinse.