Counter-marketing Junk Food With Rats & Tacos
Yum? I think not. Awhile back I wrote about Yum brands’ KFC and Taco Bell fast food franchises trying to extinguish trans-fats.
Make that trans-RATS! They now have a new hygiene and sanitation PR nightmare as WNBC broadcasts this video of a dozen rats scampering through a Yum fast food eatery in N.Y. Talk about a new meaning for their ‘run for the border’ tagline!
This video clip sums up the know what you’re eating dilemma, and many like it are YouTubing across the web. (how’s that for a digital-media viral verb?) Media can now instantly and globally bury a brand with E.coli crisis clips and disasters becoming a front page news story in a nanosecond.
Bloggers like yours truly leverage the ‘ewww’ factor to get kids to think about fast food studies impacting their health at multiple levels beyond just trans-fats.
Unfair to counter-market with ‘ewww’ tactics? I’d say it’s unfair to hammer high-risk, low-income kids 24/7 with this toxic crud, adding ‘fourth meal’ promotions to groaning dietary habits and plying kids with sat fat & sodium levels triple the intake of healthy whole foods.
Taco Bell sickened 71 people in five states with their E.coli crisis in December, yet STILL ended the year up 1% domestically, so it’s not like they can’t rebound from a dent in sales.
Ironically, Shaping Youth is covering Mexican food tomorrow in our counter-marketing program with our heavily Hispanic demographic in our Title One school which is consuming copious quanities of this junk food-fast food and highly processed-pouched food marketed excessively as convenient grab-n-gos.
We’re tackling ‘sat fat’ in frijoles and cheeses and offering switches to healthier options of fresh-Mex flavors so this might be just the “Ewwwwww” we need to add to our presentation!
All is fair in counter-marketing, so you can bet I’ll use the deep-fried chicken head that someone found in a KFC bucket a few years ago, along with this video to remind kids that junk food has more than just ‘junk’ in it sometimes.
Our wellness program, “Dare to Compare, A Gross Out Game for Good Nutrition” is based on a ‘Fear Factor’ media format, where the kids get grossed out by what they’re consuming via media, mind & body after we take apart their intake logs that they write every week.
Whether it’s seeing all the Blue 1, Yellow 5, and candy bar in a bowl breakfasts they’re eating with gobs of colored, flavored junk like Apple Jacks, Fruit Loops and PopTarts, deconstructing the sodium and sat fat in a Lunchable, or extruding hardened playdough to simulate arteries hardened by too much sodium, kids ‘get it’ when they see and play with hands-on visuals and media deconstruction.
Media clips from “SuperSize Me”, cartoon videos riffing off of Fast Food Nation like “Backwards Hamburger” or even this meat additive animated video on how beef is colorized and gassed to make it more appealing, are helpful to “gross out kids with awareness” and get that ‘ewwww’ factor front and center to change behavior.
So thanks, Yum, for helping me out with my session tomorrow!
In the food fight for kids’ health and well-being, we need all the counter-marketing ammo we can get. All’s fair in film and media.
Other topics you might like
No related items were found.



Subscribe using RSS
Bloglines
Feedblitz
Technorati
[...] engagement on multi-levels, and though pragmatics may change, we can all be enriched. Example? Our counter-marketing has been successful in Title One schools surprising many educators who considered these kids [...]
[...] take note of ALL these items in schoolyards to see what kids are REALLY eating in order to build our counter-marketing cues from there…So send us any of your pet peeves to solve and we’ll toss them into our [...]
[...] whether it’s Cool the Earth imparting their nuggets of green, or Shaping Youth counter-marketing nuggets of processed junk food, I say we engage kids as catalysts for household change toward a [...]