This irreverent campaign for Brazilian skincare brand Mami Wata is turning heads by, er, turning heads.
In a world increasingly dominated by AI and facial recognition, one Brazilian skincare company has found a creative way to harness this controversial tech… by, well, poking fun at bald people.
Mami Wata, a vegan and reef-safe skincare brand from Brazil, has just unveiled Bald Face: an innovative campaign that uses artificial intelligence to detect the apparent ‘faces’ that can sometimes appear in the folds of people’s heads.
Created by Artplan, Brazil’s largest agency with fully domestic capital, the quirky initiative offers a “two-for-one” sunscreen promotion specifically for those with less coverage up top. The promotion is cleverly tied to the campaign’s central message: if you’re bald, you’re effectively exposing twice the skin surface to harmful UV rays, so you need twice the protection.
Tech meets humour
The campaign’s genius lies in how it subverts facial recognition technology. Rather than using it for the usual purposes of security or identity verification, Mami Wata has trained its algorithms to identify the often-joked-about phenomenon where the natural creases and folds on the back of a bald head can resemble facial features – eyes, nose and mouth included.
Once the system successfully detects a “bald face,” it automatically unlocks the promotion. This techie twist serves as both a talking point and an engaging way to draw attention to the top of skin cancer.
“Our challenge was to communicate a serious health issue in a way that felt human and approachable,” explains Rodrigo Almeida, chief creative officer at Artplan. “We believe that humour when used with care and empathy, can be a bridge to real awareness and change.”
Star power
To boost the campaign’s visibility, Mami Wata has enlisted several well-known bald personalities, including former Olympic swimmer Fernando Scherer (aka Xuxa) and comedian Toninho Tornado. These celebrities are using their social media platforms to share personal experiences and help amplify the campaign’s reach.
More generally, it feels like a bit of a throwback to the days of the 1970s and 1980s when advertising typically harnessed humour to engage customers and create a halo effect around the brand. And this is no accident. In the press materials, the agency cites the findings in Oracle’s ‘The Happiness Report’, which states that 91% of consumers prefer brands that use humour in their communications, and 90% are more likely to remember funny advertisements.
The serious side
Chuckles aside, the underlying health concern is genuine. Without hair to provide natural protection, the scalp becomes particularly vulnerable to sun damage. According to the Brazilian Society of Dermatology, failure to properly protect the scalp can increase skin cancer risk by up to 30%.
At the same time, baldness affects a substantial portion of the global population. World Health Organisation data suggests approximately 50% of men over 50 experience some degree of hair loss. In Brazil alone, this translates to roughly 42 million people.
The promotion can be accessed through the campaign’s dedicated website at www.baldfaces.com, where visitors can put the facial recognition technology to the test.
By combining humour, technology, and genuine health concerns, Artplan has done a great job of raising awareness of sun protection while engaging people through unexpected creativity. It demonstrates that even serious health messages can benefit from a touch of well-placed humour.