The Commercial Appeal

Cheerios serves up edgy TV ad

Mixed-race family selling cereal

- By Leanne Italie

NEW YORK — A mom sits at her kitchen table when her grade schooler saunters up with a big box of Cheerios.

“Mom,” says the girl. “Dad told me Cheerios is good for your heart. Is that true?”

Cut to dad waking from a nap on the living room couch with a pile of Cheerios on his chest (where his heart is) crunchily cascading to the floor.

The message is in line with the company’s Heart Healthy campaign, except this 30-second ad features a black dad, white mom and biracial child and produced enough vitriol on YouTube that Cheerios requested the comments section be turned off.

The company is standing by the fictitious family, which reflects a black-white racial mix uncommon in commercial­s today, especially in ads on TV, at a time when interracia­l and interethni­c couples are on the rise in real life, according to 2010 U. S. Census data, brand strategist­s and marketing consultant­s.

“The reality is that in general most big companies don’t want to take a lot of risks,” said Laura Ries, who has written five books on marketing and brand strategy and consults for companies large, small and in between.

“The ability for nameless, faceless people to get on the Internet is out there, and companies don’t like it when people yell at them,” she said.

Camille Gibson, vice president of marketing for Cheerios, said it’s the first time the ad campaign that focuses on family moments has featured an interracia­l couple, with General Mills Inc. casting the actors to reflect the changing U.S. population.

“We felt like we were reflecting an American family,” Gibson said.

As a large company, Minneapoli­s-based General Mills is used to getting some degree of negative feedback and wasn’t surprised by the comments on YouTube, she said, but it was the first time the company requested the site turn the comments section off because of the vitriol.

Another site, Reddit, filtered out negative comments on a thread started with a comment in support of the ad. The site left Cheerios defenders’ remarks online.

The national ad will continue running as scheduled for several more months and Cheerios isn’t planning any changes, Gibson said. She declined to say whether the campaign would feature interracia­l ads going forward.

Overall, Gibson said, the feedback has been overwhelmi­ngly supportive: “Consumers are actually responding very positively to the ad.”

With millions of ad dollars at stake, how seriously do big companies like Cheerios take racist backlashes? Very, said Allen Adamson, managing director of the branding firm Landor Associates, but caving to critics is just as dangerous to a company as large as Cheerios.

“Advertiser­s for many years always took the safe route, which was to try to ruffle no feathers and in doing so became less and less authentic and real,” he said. “To succeed today, big brands like Cheerios need to be in touch with what’s authentic and true about American families.”

Those families include married couples of different races and ethnicitie­s who grew by 28 percent in the decade between 2000 and 2010, from 7 percent to 10 percent, Census data shows.

Cheerios is not the first brand to show a black and white couple with a biracial child. A TV commercial for Blockbuste­r recently featured a white mom, black dad and biracial son enjoying a rental on the couch. As far back as 2009, Philadelph­ia Cream Cheese had a black man and white woman (no wedding bands) enjoying a bagel breakfast in bed.

 ?? DAVID DUPREY / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Cheerios is standing by the fictitious biracial family featured in their latest Heart Healthy campaign.
DAVID DUPREY / ASSOCIATED PRESS Cheerios is standing by the fictitious biracial family featured in their latest Heart Healthy campaign.
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