Itโs one of Australiaโs most relatable advertising campaigns to date: A bunch of women battling the everyday problems that go hand-in-hand with having lady parts.
But while more than 500 women were surveyed to come up with the concept for Berleiโs latest Womankind commercial, they may be waiting a while to see it.
Facebook and Instagram have rejected the ad โout of fear of potential offense to the community.โ
The offensive content in question?
Boobs of all diversities being โsuppressed,โ โbound,โ โhidden,โ โforced apart,โ โprodded, poked, pressured, pushed, oppressed, restricted,โ and โopposedโ in the search for the right support.
While this is undoubtedly a reality for most of the female population, the โpixilated nudity, overt focus on bouncing breasts and overly zoomed imagesโ do not comply with the social networking sitesโ policies.
โThe ad highlights the daily realities women have with their breasts in an honest and authentic way,โ Berlei hit back in a statement.
โLike the bra itself, the ad was designed to empower women to care for and invest in themselves.โ
The underwear giant also argued that the ruling is just the tip of the iceberg, claiming this case simply โhighlights societyโs issues where breasts are classed as sexual property.โ
โThey would also like to change the narrative of how brands advertise to women and hope to be able to take their message to their online community without being suppressed,โ they added.
You can watch the ad in full below:
This article originally appeared on Womenโs Health.