Typically, Directed by Anna Ginsburg & Caitlin McCarthy released for Menstrual Hygiene Day
Period poverty charity Bloody Good Period is on a mission to end period shame. Marking Menstrual Hygiene Day on 28th May, their punchy new #NoShameHere campaign aims to remove shame around both menstruation and menstrual products and kick start conversations around period stigma – helping to ensure that more people can have the bloody good periods they deserve.
The #NoShameHere campaign aims to remove the secrecy and shame which surrounds periods with the release of a new film, created by Mother in partnership with Strange Beast and Directed by Anna Ginsburg and Caitlin McCarthy. Following the period experiences of a diverse group of people who menstruate, the film is upbeat, open and celebratory. The CeCe Peniston classic Finally – now named Typically – features updated lyrics to bring home period realities.
Unbelievably, there is still huge shame and taboo attached to periods, despite it being a natural and normal biological function. This is compounded for many by an inability to freely access or afford period products when they need them. Research from Bloody Good Period reveals:
- – 9 in 10 of those who menstruate experience period anxiety at work (*1)
- – 63% want employers to normalise talking about periods in the workplace (*2)
- – Hiding period products is considered ‘the norm’ – 97% of respondents in a social media poll agreed (*3)
- – 25% have experienced a time where they have had to take time off due to menstrual health issues, and it has impacted their career progression.
- – When asked what employers could do to support them when it comes to their menstrual health, 56% said to encourage and support time off for necessary health checks e.g. cervical smears.
- – The pandemic has worsened the problem of access and affordability: Bloody Good Period is now meeting a level of demand six times higher than pre-Covid, with over 81,000 packs of products distributed since the start of UK lockdown. (*4)
Gabby Edlin, CEO of Bloody Good Period, commented:
“It’s 2021 and time we confine period shame to history. On Menstrual Health Day, we’re asking everyone to wake up to periods being a part of life and recognise that society needs to accept this natural biological process. By shifting attitudes and making period products accessible, we can help everyone, especially the most marginalised in our society – those living in poverty, refugees and asylum seekers or lacking period education – to live life to its full potential.”
With demand for BGP’s services still growing, the charity is also asking people to donate to enable them to continue distributing products. Gabby Edlin added
“We believe access to period products is a matter of human rights, because not having them has such a range of consequences – for our physical and mental health, and for all of us as a society. Until they are freely available for everyone who needs them, we’ll be here getting products out to people who need them.”
Susan Hosking, Executive Creative Director, International at Mother said
“Periods are a part of life for so many of us, and though we don’t always want to sing and dance about them, a promo was a brilliant medium to get us talking about them. Using positivity and entertainment is a way for us to get the conversation flowing, and hopefully help us shake off the shame and stigma so wrongly attached to them.”
You can sponsor a period at www.bloodygoodperiod.com/donate.
About Bloody Good Period
- Bloody Good Period fights for menstrual equity and the rights of all people who bleed.
- They provide period products to refugees, asylum-seekers and those who otherwise wouldn’t be able to afford or access them. Without reliable access to period products, people are forced to use socks, newspaper, tissue – or nothing at all.
- Since the start of UK lockdown in March 2020, BGP has distributed over 79,000 packs of period products – a level of demand that’s six times higher than pre-pandemic.
- BGP is calling for period products to be #BloodyFree: sign the petition here
- You can take part in No Shame Here on Instagram account, and donate at
www.bloodygoodperiod.com/donate
CREDITS
Creative: Mother
Strategy: Mother
Music Artist: Chiara Hunter
Music Arranger: David Etherington
Music Producer: Sian Rogers
Music Supervisor: Sian Rogers & Joshua Gibbard
Music Production Company: SIREN @ Factory Ltd
Publisher: Universal Publishing
Sound studio: Jungle
Sound engineer: Hannah Webster
Production Company: Strange Beast
Directors: Anna Ginsburg, Caitlin McCarthy
Executive Producer: Kitty Turley
Producer: Zoe Muslim
Animation: Campbell Hartley, Harriet Gillian, Charlie Lane Bush, Bianca Beneduci Assad, Magnus Atom, Matt Lloyd, Alex Bernas, Olly Montagu, Giulia Frixione
Animation Assistants: Sacha Beeley, Eloise Garlick, Natasha Pollack, Lois De Silva, Lily Shaul, Julian Gallese, George Wheeler, Bug Shepherd-Barron, Daisy Mojave Holland, Inga Ziemele Compositing: Magnus Atom, Matt Lloyd
*1 A public-facing survey, managed by BGP, called ‘Have Your Bloody Say’ (HYBS), with 3,000 UK respondents, conducted online in late 2020. Full report here.
*2 As above
*3 Social media poll of BGP’s Instagram followers here
*4 BGP’s data records