Dove 'The Ad Makeover' Campaign Targets Negative Advertising (VIDEO)

WATCH: Dove Aims To End 'Feel-Bad' Ads For Women
|

We've long admired Dove's "Real Beauty" campaign, an effort launched in 2004 to enlist "real women" models (i.e. not just super-skinny professional models) to showcase Dove products and boost women's self-esteem at the same time.

The idea, which we definitely support, is "to make more women feel beautiful every day by widening stereotypical views of beauty." Now, with Dove's "The Ad Makeover," the brand is going further to make women feel beautiful: combatting negative advertising.

Specifically, Dove is setting its sights on all those small but sneaky ads on the side of your screen that shout-out to your "jelly rolls" or "love handles" or "muffin tops" (and sometimes even animate them -- that's the worst). Through Dove Australia's "The Ad Makeover," created by Ogilvy, Aussie women can go online and create alternative, feel-good ads instead. Instead of targeting your insecurities, the messages include "The perfect bum is the one you're sitting on," for example, or "When it comes to your body, love the one you're with."

Our favorite: "Think of your cups as half full."

The result? You and other women will see colorful, positive ads along the side of your profiles instead. The push to change the way we talk about our bodies -- and in this case, the way our bodies are talked about -- is something we're totally on board with. Now if only Dove could bring the Facebook campaign to U.S. soil ASAP...

Watch the video above and go to Facebook.com to see more. Would you participate?

For more "feel-good" body image vibes, check out these magazine covers with your favorite stars WITHOUT airbrushing!

Des stars au naturel
Jessica Simpson pour le magazine Marie Claire(01 of11)
Open Image Modal
(Photo de courtoisie)
Brad Pitt pour W(02 of11)
Open Image Modal
(Photo de courtoisie)
Kim Kardashian pour Life&Style(03 of11)
Open Image Modal
(Photo de courtoisie)
Jennifer Hawkins pour Marie Claire Australie(04 of11)
Open Image Modal
(Photo de courtoisie)
Sarah Murdoch pour Women's Weekly(05 of11)
Open Image Modal
(Photo de courtoisie)
Eva Herzigova pour Elle France(06 of11)
Open Image Modal
(Photo de courtoisie)
Britney Spears pour Candies(07 of11)
Open Image Modal
(Photo de courtoisie)
Sarah Palin pour Newsweek(08 of11)
Open Image Modal
(Photo de courtoisie)
Kristin Wiig pour SVD Kultur(09 of11)
Open Image Modal
(Photo de courtoisie)
Monica Bellucci pour Elle France(10 of11)
Open Image Modal
(Photo de courtoisie)
Cate Blanchett pour Intelligent Life(11 of11)
Open Image Modal
(Photo de courtoisie)

Support HuffPost

At HuffPost, we believe that everyone needs high-quality journalism, but we understand that not everyone can afford to pay for expensive news subscriptions. That is why we are committed to providing deeply reported, carefully fact-checked news that is freely accessible to everyone.

Whether you come to HuffPost for updates on the 2024 presidential race, hard-hitting investigations into critical issues facing our country today, or trending stories that make you laugh, we appreciate you. The truth is, news costs money to produce, and we are proud that we have never put our stories behind an expensive paywall.

Would you join us to help keep our stories free for all? Your will go a long way.

Support HuffPost

HuffPost Shopping’s Best Finds

MORE IN LIFE