Bros and the Search for Perpetual Childhood
Bros. They are everywhere, and they are unstoppable. Their mission: to return to the womb.
Copyranter points us to the latest example of Bro-dom in popular culture: this new bro-centric New Zealand ad campaign for PEPSI MAX, in which males are asked to make a "Bromitment" to, you know, spend time with one another, drinking PEPSI MAX. What is the real message here?
1. They pledge to "ignore a texting girlfriend who always needs to know where I am." I am with bros, okay?
2. They pledge to "fight against the ridiculousness of mum." Hmm.
3. "Even if smoking hot her asks me over for cupcakes, I'll say, 'Sorry babe. I made a Bromitment." Will you actually say that, verbatim? Alarming.
4. Bros can go online to register to win great bro prizes, including a Road Trip Across the USA "with three mates for two whole weeks."
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"No girls allowed. Get off my back, mom. Ewww, cooties. Let's run away and drive all they across the country in a real car. We can drink all the soda we want!"
The entire conceit of Bro-dom is little more than your typical vaguely homoerotic coming-of-age story, only played in reverse, as grown men seek to regress back to a time when nothing of consequence intruded upon their perpetual all-male playtime bubble.
Which is fine, if that's your thing.