Society has a funny way of deciding what deserves attention. A visible baniyan on a man barely earns a second glance, but a visible bra strap on a woman can suddenly become everyone’s business. These double standards are so deeply woven into everyday life that most people rarely stop to question them.
XYXX‘s latest campaign, ‘If Baniyans Were Bras’, does exactly that. By flipping the script and placing men under the same microscope, the brand highlights the absurdity of these unwritten social rules through humour, discomfort, and a healthy dose of irony.
Created in collaboration with content creator and Pink Sauce Studios founder Vir Saini, the campaign takes a simple yet powerful insight and turns it into a conversation starter. Rather than relying on the usual innerwear advertising formula of celebrity swagger, gym-toned physiques, and confidence clichés, XYXX uses everyday social observations to build a more engaging narrative.
At the centre of the film is a straightforward question: what if men were scrutinised for visible baniyan lines in the same way women are often judged for visible bra straps? That question drives the narrative, placing men in situations that feel amusing at first but gradually become uncomfortably familiar.
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While the campaign was designed to spotlight XYXX’s Invisible Vest and appeal to younger consumers, its premise taps into a broader conversation around the social expectations attached to clothing and appearance. The simplicity of the idea is what gives it its impact.
How XYXX Uses Role Reversal To Expose Everyday Double Standards
What makes the campaign work is its restraint. Pink Sauce Studios and XYXX allow the humour to do the heavy lifting, letting viewers arrive at the message on their own rather than spelling it out. The result feels more like an observation of everyday behaviour than a statement designed to provoke.
As the film unfolds, the comedy gradually gives way to recognition. The comments, assumptions, and unsolicited opinions directed at the men mirror experiences many women encounter regularly, creating a moment of reflection without disrupting the light-hearted tone.
The timing also works in the campaign’s favour. Discussions around gender expectations and everyday biases continue to shape mainstream culture, giving the film a relevance that feels natural rather than manufactured.
What makes the effort particularly notable is that it comes from a men’s innerwear brand. Instead of focusing solely on product features, XYXX builds its message around a relatable insight, using humour and cultural observation to stand apart in a category often dominated by predictable storytelling.
The film eventually circles back to the Invisible Vest, ensuring the product remains part of the conversation. By pairing a simple product proposition with an insight-driven narrative, XYXX delivers a campaign that is memorable, thought-provoking, and distinctly different from the category norm.






