Whitehorse Daily Star

Image title

Photo by Vince Fedoroff

THE REAL D – Pictured here are Vitamin D pills the Department of Health and Social Services has been trying to promote.

Yukon government does U-turn on ‘D’ ads

The Yukon government’s recent bid to ensure residents are receiving enough Vitamin D is getting a rise out of the social media masses.

By CP on January 26, 2016

The Yukon government’s recent bid to ensure residents are receiving enough Vitamin D is getting a rise out of the social media masses.

The Department of Health and Social Services recently rolled out a campaign exhorting residents of the sun-deprived territory to ensure they’re getting enough vitamin D.

But the kind of activity the campaign wound up promoting is arguably best accomplished indoors.

The department’s “we all need the D” campaign, using a common slang term for the penis, quickly went viral and spawned giggly dismay across social media.

Many of the comments voiced incredulity that the Yukon government could have commited such a gaffe without realizing how the message would be interpreted.

But the department itself says the campaign was not wholly accidental, adding the bid to target a younger crowd got a little out of hand. It tweaked the ad earlier this week in the face of the mockery.

“When trying to reach a young adult audience, Health and Social Services often reaches for provocative and humorous messaging, to great success,” the government said in a statement.

“However, what was considered cheeky messaging on our Vitamin D campaign escalated to ribald humour, taking the campaign into graphic areas that were never intended.”

The original campaign consisted of a handful of posters asking what, in hindsight, proved to be some provocative questions.

One ad asked Yukon residents: “How do you do the D?”

Another depicted a woman gazing at a plate of fish with the caption: “Need a little help . . . with your daily D?”

Another poster showed a man musing about how he managed to reach his 30s without realizing that he, too, needed to “do the D.”

It didn’t take long for the ads to arouse widespread mockery, with U.S. websites BuzzFeed and Jezebel among those posting items and weighing in with glee as social media users laughed at what they believed to be an oversight.

“Counting down to a population boom in the Yukon in 3...2...1,” wrote one Twitter user.

“Do guys just naturally get the D?” quipped another.

The Yukon government ad now simply asks: “Have you taken your vitamin D today?”

And despite the embarrassment caused by the original campaign, the department maintained that it had left them more than satisfied.

“While the campaign had some unexpected results, such as being mentioned in BuzzFeed, we definitely hit our target audience and beyond,” the statement read.

It went on to point out websites that prominently mentioned the real purpose of the ad blitz in their coverage.

“This is the entire point of the campaign.”

By Michelle McQuigge
The Canadian Press

Comments (13)

Up 7 Down 6

Simple Man on Jan 30, 2016 at 6:51 pm

@soembarrassing

That's some genuine first world embarrassment for sure! We should take a moment in silence with heads suitably hung. Oh the shame....

Up 9 Down 25

So Embarrassing on Jan 30, 2016 at 8:46 am

So embarrassing to be a Yukoner this week. The whole world is laughing at us. Let's hope they have better judgment when dealing with the rest of our health and social service needs. Scary to think these people are in charge...

Up 21 Down 25

It's great! on Jan 28, 2016 at 4:06 pm

I honestly didn't get the reference. I thought D meant large breasts because they have a woman there with her shirt open and another with a baby suckling.
Men need D's is what I thought it meant.

oh well at least we can all go around and ask women "got enough D today?!" without having to worry about sexual harassment in the office.
"I was just quoting the ad!"

Up 29 Down 6

Simple Man on Jan 28, 2016 at 4:02 pm

I thought the ad was genius....the backpeddling? Not so much, shows no spine. People seriously need to loosen up....next thing the letter "D" is right up there with the swaztika and ultimately gets stricken from the alphabet.

Up 22 Down 21

Tom Stevens on Jan 28, 2016 at 10:25 am

Being made fun of and laughed at on Television and Social Media is not an indicator of a successful idea. Really, if the plan was to have a backwards reference, then why change them after the hoopla.

If the idea was to look foolish and represent as that..success!!!!!

Up 64 Down 17

Everyone needs the D! on Jan 27, 2016 at 4:29 pm

Hey "Just one Yukoner" Relax. It's a joke, an innuendo. It's was designed to get people talking.
It's amazing how we can talk about rape, murder, drug crimes, residential schools, transgender and mental health issues so openly these days, but any reference to sex must be censored and hid behind closed doors. Take it easy.
I was so overcome with SADness by reading your comment that I went straight home and had a big dose of D that I keep in my bedside table.

Up 15 Down 19

June Jackson on Jan 27, 2016 at 3:45 pm

I thought it was a pretty funny ad until I was talking about it with a friend and her 5 year old said..What's so funny? why are you laughing? I didn't have a thing to say to a 5 year old, but I didn't think it was funny anymore.

Target audiences are not the only people reading...

Up 44 Down 26

YukonMik on Jan 27, 2016 at 8:51 am

More wasted tax dollars. Remember when they did the whole social inclusive campaign by painting on the sidewalks such slogans as "You don't belong here"?
YTG - you REALLY need to use some focus groups BEFORE you pay to print your ads.

Up 48 Down 27

Tourism and Health $$$ on Jan 26, 2016 at 11:05 pm

This is the second major advertising campaign this government has had to pull and "massage" at the expense of Yukon taxpayers. Is there any accountability with this government?
It was a nice attempt to spin that this latest major blunder was part of a larger plan but Yukoner's are not this gullible.

Up 75 Down 26

Valleygirl on Jan 26, 2016 at 8:57 pm

Of course they were aware of the reference to the "D" . The campaign got the attention it wanted and have people talking which is alot better than other campaigns that fall to the wayside. Genius and ballsy

Up 32 Down 98

Just One Yukoner on Jan 26, 2016 at 5:56 pm

Seriously ridiculous. As a young professional, that would be part of your target audience, I'm embarrassed that our government would intentionally use "the D" to grab attention. How about some professionalism? What a waste of money. The advertisements (especially the one with the man and the dog) were tasteless. I feel sorry for the people who appeared in the advertisements. Frankly I'm an embarrassed Yukoner, which is a new feeling for me. Ya- we can all pass it off as funny and no big deal and perhaps something social media went wild with. The fact is - this was a big (and by admission an intentional) mistake.

FYI Heath and Social Services we ALL don't need " a little d"- Not all Yukon women, men, Yukon children or seniors. For a department that is responsible for such things as child protection, family services, continuing care, mental health (including people who have experienced sexual assault because someone just felt they just needed "a little D). I think a full internal review of this campaign and any person who's desk it passed over (serious lack of judgment)... In my opinion it is sexist, crude, unprofessional, insensitive, and embarrassing to a wide population of citizens.

Up 35 Down 14

Groucho d'North on Jan 26, 2016 at 5:51 pm

As a result of this campaign, it received much more attention than a traditional poster or display ad campaign would have generated at triple the cost. Good marketing takes advantage of the common social environment and pop culture. In these modern times going viral is a better accolade than winning an advertising award. Congrats to the folks at Health and Social Services for capturing our attention and delivering the message that we all need the D to prevent SADness. On a related note: Milk with added Vitamin D does a body good.

Up 103 Down 16

Mike on Jan 26, 2016 at 3:19 pm

“While the campaign had some unexpected results, such as being mentioned in BuzzFeed, we definitely hit our target audience and beyond”

So..........why retool the ads? Just admit it you were so out of the loop you had no idea what you were even insinuating

Add your comments or reply via Twitter @whitehorsestar

In order to encourage thoughtful and responsible discussion, website comments will not be visible until a moderator approves them. Please add comments judiciously and refrain from maligning any individual or institution. Read about our user comment and privacy policies.

Your name and email address are required before your comment is posted. Otherwise, your comment will not be posted.