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Brands Keep Pace by Eliminating Racist Packaging Imagery

Many brands are retiring controversial brand mascots in order to better reflect the consumers they serve. Here’s a glimpse into their calculus.

Brand Perception

The May 25, 2020 murder of George Floyd is powering a tsunami movement against racism, along with its symbols, including those on packaging. According to press releases, the brands, Mrs. Butterworth’s, Cream of Wheat, Uncle Ben’s, Aunt Jemima, and Eskimo Pie, will undergo packaging changes.

Matt Reynolds’ 6/23/2020 article “Packaging No Spectator in the Social Movement” (pwgo.to/5680) provides an industry insider’s perspective. He reminds that packaging, through its imagery, communicates societal/cultural norms and that, therefore, packaging imagery should keep pace with changes in those norms.

There’s another perspective: that of what kinds of changes are feasible. Beset brands variously have described forthcoming efforts as review, retire, and evolve. Even without additional details, it’s safe to say that the brands face different options, in reflection of the nature and extent of their racial insensitivity. What the brands face in common, however, is a new type of package research and design, wherein names and mascots are liabilities and expendable.

Months prior, Land O’Lakes’ packaging was revised with the removal of the Native American woman. Yet to be seen is whether other brands, such as Red Man tobacco and sports teams from the professional ranks on down ,will abandon the mascoting of tribes who collectively were driven to the brink of genocide. The Land O’Lakes approach, nonetheless, doesn’t lend itself to all brands faced with removing racist imaging from their packaging.

Cream of Wheat (founded in 1893) has as its mascot a toothsomely smiling black man in servant-white attire, holding a steaming bowl of cereal. The mascot should be removed because there is no revamping that can rewrite its racist origins. The decision of whether to retain the brand name rests on whether the mascot is regarded as the lone offender. Uncle Ben’s (dating back to the 1940s) also has as its mascot a black man. Different here is that the mascot doubles as the brand name. Over the decades, the mascot has received makeovers meant to be less antebellum. Those efforts are unacceptable in this era that clamors for the mascot’s removal. Question: are brand and mascot inextricably linked, such that the former can’t survive separation from the latter?

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