Mayan group's logo too much like Toucan Sam, Kellogg's squawks
By Tiffany Hsu
The group added its own accusation: Kellogg’s Froot Loops advertising strategy sends racist messages to its young target audience with the presence of a dark-skinned villain named the Greedy Witch Doctor who steals from children, it said.
Kellogg quickly removed the video after people noted it was blatantly racist. But every good blogger knows to save screen images of controversial items. So let's see how many problems this commercial has:
What's going on here is obvious. The commercial is treating Indians as primitive people of the past. There's no hint whatsoever that millions of Maya Indians still live in Central America.
"There are no Maya Indians or government officials around. Let's climb these irreplaceable ruins without permission."
We've seen this attitude in everything from the Indiana Jones movies to Avatar. It's a classic example of Western (white) privilege in action. Historically, Euro-Americans haven't cared if someone owned something they wanted. They simply assumed their divine right to possess everything and took it.
"Treasure! I see, I want, I take! Because I'm an American toucan!"
Note the unintentional irony when they call the witch doctor "greedy." They think he's greedy because he objects to their taking his possessions without permission. Another word for the toucans' actions is thievery.
In reality, the toucans are the greedy ones. They want something they haven't earned. They exemplify this infamous John Wayne quote:
"No, you can't have my Froot Loops. I'm greedily keeping them to myself rather than giving them to you for no reason."
Indian looks evil
"Look closely at my beady little eyes and big hooked nose. And the weird lighting that keeps most of my body in shadow even though you toucans are well-lit. Clearly I'm not just evil, I'm evil incarnate. I'm as evil as the Jews who were also caricatured like this."
The point again is obvious. According to this commercial, Native religion is primitive, superstitious nature worship. It's a Halloween mask, chant, and dance. And Kellogg can fabricate Maya beliefs because (it thinks) no one is left to care.
"All us superstitious savages practice primitive rites that involve black magic. Here's an example."
Catholic Witch Doctor?
Imagine the toucans entered a cathedral and said they wanted the gold altarpieces. A Catholic priest in a toucan outfit tried to stop them. He used magic dust to scare them off with images of Christian saints. Like Kellogg's Indian, he's identified as "Greedy Witch Doctor."
This scenario is identical to the one in the commercial, but it's inconceivable that it would appear in America's mainstream media. People would immediately condemn it as false and prejudiced. Kellogg would apologize profusely, chastise the executives who approved it, terminate the ad agency, etc.
But, some may object, the scenarios are not identical. Catholic priests don't wear toucan outfits and aren't witch doctors. That's the point: The same is true of Maya priests.
In fact, central Africa is much closer to the Vatican than it is to Mesoamerica. Some Africans are now Catholic bishops and priests. And Catholic ceremonies supposedly heal or prevent Satanic influences, same as witch-doctoring. So a Catholic priest has more in common with a witch doctor than a Maya priest does.
No blacks, just Indians
It goes without saying that Kellogg would never show an actual witch doctor. You know, an African in a grass skirt with a bone through his nose. Like the one below.
But the company thought nothing of showing an evil Indian in the same position. Once again, Indians win the "Oppression Olympics." Sometimes America's racism is simply incredible.
For more on the subject, see Stereotypes in Tarzan of the Apes, Tribalism in Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa, and Indian Religion Isn't Shamanism.
6 comments:
"Comment: Racist messages? Yes, indeed!"
But surely Toucan Sam is a member of the Rainbow Coalition!
Technically, the picture you showed was of a Papuan with Obama's head shopped on.
Whatever the case, it's Kellogg. I mean, yeah, they've moved beyond their alternative-medicine roots, but still...
"Alternative medicine" is a generous term for the healthcare scam that was the original Kellogg's.
Yes, Anonymous, I know about the image. I posted about it in Obama "Witch Doctor" is Papua New Guinean.
"It's Kellogg"...so it's a major corporation that should reflect America's racial and cultural diversity automatically? If that's your point, I agree.
Apparently the video accompanied a children's game on the Kellogg website. Here's more on the story:
http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2011/08/toucan-play-this-game/
Mayan Message to Kellogg: Toucan Play This Game
After receiving the letter from Kellogg, Haswell said they went to the Froot Loops’ website to figure out what the company objected to. There they found a game in the Kellogg’s Adventure series, which supposedly puts kids in a Mayan setting, and the only character of color is the villain, an evil witchdoctor who cackles and steals. “Suddenly, it became a little bit more important to us than protecting our trademark,” he said.
Haswell got emotional talking about the atrocities committed against the Mayan people, once one of the Americas’ most sophisticated civilizations, first by the Spanish Conquistadors in the 1500s and then by the Guatemalan government during a decades-long civil war in the 1900s. Haswell said of the Froot Loops game, “It is just so insensitive. You scratch your head and wonder how people can be that dumb.”
Dr. Christina Gish Hill, a professor with the Department of Anthropology and American Indian Studies at Iowa State University, sees the logo issue as very extreme and even laughed a little at the idea of a company owning rights to representations of the toucan. But the Froot Loops witchdoctor game was not at all funny to her. “It is very shocking that a company as prominent and far-reaching as Kellogg would create imagery that is just so blatantly stereotype and certainly offensive,” she said.
"..so it's a major corporation that should reflect America's racial and cultural diversity automatically?"
Actually, Kellogg should hire the best employees, without any regard to skin color or culture.
dmarks said
""..so it's a major corporation that should reflect America's racial and cultural diversity automatically?"
Actually, Kellogg should hire the best employees, without any regard to skin color or culture."
absolutely, but isn't the first quote referring to what they portray in their advertising?
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