Who is Mr. Clean: The well-known cleaning product mascot for Procter & Gamble, Mr. Clean, is a made-up character who is straight. Since he was made in 1958, Mr. Clean has been associated with strength and cleanliness through his bald head, white T-shirt, and hoops. The figure has been in a huge number of commercials promoting the benefits of the cleaning products he represents.
Since Mr. Clean is a character that was made up and animated, information about his real life, like his sexual orientation, is not important or shown. Any guesses about his sexuality are just that—guesses—and have nothing to do with the character’s main job as a business symbol.
Is Mr. Clean Gay?
As a result of his sexuality, Mr. Clean thinks that all kinds of s*x are too dirty. He doesn’t think of himself as gay, straight, or bisexual. Clean up has always been his first love. Even seeing someone in anything other than pure white makes him sick to his stomach. His life has always been like this.
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Another tweet said, “Mr. Clean is not gay, straight, or bi; he is as*xual because any kind of s*x is too dirty for him.” Clean up has always been his first love.
In the past, there have been characters who easily fit into the sexual category, which saved the creators the trouble of having to give them a name. For instance, Spongebob Squarepants’ creator said in 2005 that the pineapple-under-the-sea resident talked about his sexuality.
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Who is Mr. Clean?
In some places, Mr. Clean is also called Mr. Proper. The American company Procter & Gamble owns the Mr. Clean trademark and voice. The figure was first made for an all-purpose cleaner, but it later grew to include a rough melamine foam sponge.
Linwood Burton came up with the idea for the all-purpose cleaner. He was a marine ship cleaner who had customers all along the East Coast of the United States. In 1958, House Peters Jr. played Mr. Clean in the first live-action TV commercials based on the book.
The Mr. Clean jingle has been around since the product came out. In the popular music genre, a male artist (Don Cherry) and a female artist first recorded it as a duet.
When Thomas Scott Cadden worked for the Tatham-Laird & Kudner Advertising Agency in the spring of 1957, he wrote the jingle at home in Skokie, Illinois. The jingle was played in a newer version in the 2016 TV ad. Among all the commercial jingles that are played on TV, this one has been around the longest.
The competition for Mr. Clean Scenes
When Honda Motor Co. started an ad campaign in 1998, one of the ads featured Mr. Clean and promoted the company’s clean-running Accord and other Honda cars, bikes, lawnmowers, string trimmers, and marine engines.
As part of a competition on YouTube in March 2007, Mr. Clean asked people to create commercials for the Mr. Clean Magic Eraser. You could enter until June 30, 2007. In September 2007, the $10,000 prize winner for the video “Here’s to Stains” was named.