The Topeka Capital-Journal

Kellogg’s CEO: Eat cereal for dinner

Pilnick under fire for remarks made during recent CNBC interview

- Emilee Coblentz USA TODAY

Kellogg’s year-old campaign promoting cereal for dinner got some new life last week after the company’s CEO, Gary Pilnick, mentioned it seems to be “landing really well” with American consumers.

His remarks, made in a live interview with CNBC, caught the attention of some shoppers whose response has been anything but grrreat.

“Advertisin­g ‘Cereal for Dinner’ is a way to deal with the steep cost of groceries right now,” Pilnick said. “If you think about the cost of cereal for a family versus what they’d otherwise do, that’s going to be much more affordable.”

The interview followed a report from the Wall Street Journal that Americans are spending 10% or more of their income on food, the most they have in 30 years. Previous reporting from USA TODAY has found that the average family is spending more than $1,000 on groceries each month.

Kellogg, which owns cereals like Frosted Flakes, Froot Loops, Corn Flakes and Raisin Bran, “tends to be a great destinatio­n when consumers are under pressure,” Pilnick said, adding that the price of cereal with milk and fruit “is less than a dollar.”

Pilnick was asked if he thought his comments would sit well with Americans. “It’s landing really well,” Pilnick said, adding that 25% of cereal consumptio­n is outside of the “breakfast window” anyway.

“Cereal for dinner is something that is probably more on trend now, and we would expect to continue as that consumer is under pressure.”

The “Cereal for Dinner” campaign, which ends with the slogan “Give chicken the night off,” began more than a year ago as Americans were feeling the effect of higher inflation at the grocery store.

Food prices increased by 9.9% in 2022, faster than any year since 1979, according to the Economic Research Service with the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e. That number includes food consumed outside of the home. In-home food increased by 11.4% last year.

The internet isn’t reacting favorably to Pilnick’s comments, however.

“This fool is making $4 million a year. Do you think he’s feeding his kids cereal for dinner?” one TikTok user said in a video response circulatin­g online.

Pilnick’s annual income includes a $1 million base salary and more than $4 million in incentive compensati­on, according to a September 2023 SEC filing published by Business Insider.

“And how do you think consumers became under pressure?” TikTok user James Li, said adding that companies like Kellogg have used the excuse of inflation to price gouge consumers.

And it seems that the company is “enriching its shareholde­r,” Li said.

USA TODAY has reached out to Kellogg’s for comment.

MILWAUKEE – In the era of artificial intelligen­ce, cheating is only getting easier for students.

Some instructor­s say they can easily tell when students turn in AI-generated work. Others find it far trickier and will turn to online AI detectors for confirmati­on when their suspicions are raised. Educators everywhere are trying to create AI-proof assignment­s.

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel tested how well AI can complete college-level work – and whether instructor­s can detect it.

A Harvard student last year asked seven professors and teaching assistants to grade essays written in response to a class assignment. To minimize response bias, the student told instructor­s the essays might have been written by herself or by AI, but in reality, all of the work was done by GPT-4, a version of the chatbot from OpenAI.

The AI-generated assignment­s received mostly A’s and B’s, along with one Pass.

“Not only can GPT-4 pass a typical social science and humanities-focused freshman year at Harvard, but it can get pretty good grades,” the student wrote in an essay published by the Chronicle of Higher Education.

I followed the same methodolog­y as the Harvard student.

Professors emailed me a smaller assignment they would give their students, not an end-of-the-semester research paper. I told them some of the work would be done honestly and other assignment­s handled by ChatGPT. In fact, AI did all of the work.

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