We perpetuate these sterotypes all the time...can we be mad anymore?
One thing is clear about Acme Markets' recent Black History Month circular: It sparked a debate.
All for an advertisement the company says it has been running for seven years and never caused a flap before.
In its Jan. 29 circulars, under a "Black History Month" banner, a set of specials is advertised for products including corn bread, collard greens and grape soda. Since then, the Delaware chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People says more than a hundred people have complained the products perpetuate stereotypes. Delaware NAACP President Cecil C. Wilson called for Acme to immediately run a full-page apology "in all of Delaware's newspapers."
"It's racist, it's insensitive, it's not culturally correct," Wilson said. "Don't assume that to celebrate Black History Month that we must have corn bread. Whoever put this ad together thought it'd be a good joke."
Officials from Supervalu did not respond to interview requests Friday. In a statement, the company said the advertisement was designed to highlight Black History Month and many of the items are products supplied through the company's "supplier diversity program."
"For example, Glory Foods, an African American-owned manufacturer, is featured with four of its products because it is our way of supporting and strengthening their brand with added exposure during the month of February," the statement said.
Supervalu, based in Eden Prairie, Minn., operates 12 Acme supermarkets in Delaware and 118 others in Maryland, New Jersey and Pennsylvania. The promotional ad, which went to 3.5 million households, also advertises a President Barack Obama DVD and plaque, paper towels, dish soap, energy drinks and Jose Ole chimichangas and tacos.
The ad wasn't offensive to Jerry Mondesire, president of the Philadelphia chapter of the NAACP, whose organization has teamed up with Supervalu for events in the past, including in-store promotions.
Mondesire said Supervalu doesn't need to apologize for anything.
"I eat those foods, so it's fine if someone markets those foods to me," Mondesire said of the corn bread and collard greens. "A lot of companies market to African-Americans during the month of February."
Wilson, on the other hand, said Acme shouldn't be discounting any foods specifically because it's Black History Month.
"What they're trying to do is pull in a particular group of people during a particular month to jack up their sales," he said. "If they want to continue to do that, they're going to see a decline."
Acme discounts products tied to 21 other holiday and ethnic celebrations. During Hispanic Heritage Month -- starting Sept. 15, Acme discounts foods such as salsa and avocados. Maria Matos of the Latin American Community Center said those discounts wouldn't offend her. Instead, she'd "head over there to shop in a heartbeat."
But because food isn't tied to Black History Month, the discounts demonstrate that Supervalu doesn't comprehend the meaning of the observation, said Ken Smikle, the founder of Chicago-based Target Market News, a firm that focuses on marketing-industry activities that target black consumers. Any controversy could easily have been avoided, Smikle said, had Supervalu sought advice from a black advertising agency.
"It's not like Thanksgiving or Christmas, and this has nothing to do with the Hispanic holiday," he said. "What's offensive about this is how that store interprets how I or anyone else celebrate Black History Month."
In Colonial times, slave owners would discard the remains of butchered hogs, and slaves would cook and season those parts, such as chitterlings and feet, into delicacies. The Acme ad took on a similar theme, Wilson said, by discounting Acme soda and maple syrup instead of the brand-name counterparts.
"This whole thing is cheapo," he said. "All the products on sale are typically low-grade products that they have to clean off the shelves. I don't know what their motive is, but it still reeks with suspicion."
Jerome Brown Jr. of New Castle felt that the ad was stereotypical, but not racist.
"I have a few friends who don't use any of these items," said Brown, who is black. "Putting collard greens and hot sauce on sale makes it more of an ignorant stereotype -- but that doesn't mean I'll stop shopping at Acme."
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