The 25 Most Racist Food Advertisements

So unappetizing.

October 26, 2013
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Oh, America the beautiful, your past can be so ugly. Take a look at advertisements from past centuries and you'll find a culture mired in explicit sexism and racism. To be frank, shit is bugged the fuck out. For many years, there was no better barometer of the Nation's tolerance level than the advertisements for food. How are things for black Americans? Check your box of pancake flour; they aren't good.

Over the years, the imagery has become (for the most part) less obvious, but there are still some shocking ads out there. Take a look at this gallery of 25 racist food advertisements.

Obama Fried Chicken (Beijing, China)

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Product: Fried Chicken
Circa: 2011


Ripped from the headlines, this is one flagrant example of racism masquearding as political commentary. See also the appearance of Common at the White House.

Eska Water (Canada)

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Product: Bottled Water
Circa: 2011


Was this Canadian company thinking when they greenlighted an ad campaign that dressed up doughy white guys like Native Americans? No. Probably they weren't.

Duet Ice Cream Bars (Russia)

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Product: Ice Cream
Circa: 2009


This ad ran shortly after the election of President Obama. It didn't run long.

Watermelon Soda

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Product: Soda
Circa: 2009


This soda was discovered at Targets here in New York. Does this mean that Targets have en masse traveled back in time to the Antebellum?

Obama Waffles

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Product: Cereal
Circa: 2008


This product was created by some GOPers. We hate them.

Whiskas (Sweden)

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Product: Cat Food
Circa: 2008


Racism knows no borders. Welcome to Sweden, where a cat food commercial (click here to watch) was quickly pulled for stereotyping Asians as stupid.

Kia-Ora (UK)

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Product: Fruit Drink
Circa: 1980s


Click here to watch the entire batshit commercial for a British orange drink. It's a nightmare.

The Rice Council of America

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Product: Rice
Circa: 1970s


Really? Someone from the Rice Council of America thought this was a fine idea?

Corn Flakes

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Product: Cereal
Circa: 1960s


This passed for humor at the time.

Aunt Jemima (III)

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Product: Pancake Flour
Circa: 1950s


Again, far less cartoonish than the earlier incarnations, but still afloat in obvious racism.

Chun King Chow Mein

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Product: Canned Chinese Food
Circa: 1950s


Note the little Asian caricature near the ad's bottom.

Canned Florida Grapefruit Juice

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Product: Juice
Circa: 1940s


More fun from WWII.

Wheaties

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Product: Cereal
Circa: 1940s


Just one example of war-time ads that mercilessly took racist shots at whoever America was at war with at the time.

Don't Cry Sweet Potaotes

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Product: Produce
Circa: 1940s


From the dice to the strange brand name, this ad is a head-scratching clusterfuck of awfulnesss.

Aunt Jemima (II)

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Product: Pancake Flour
Circa: 1940s


The second incarnation of Aunt Jemima is slightly less cartoonish than the first, but only slightly.

Borden's Evaporated Milk

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Product: Evaporated Milk
Circa: 1930s


So many of these ads derive their racism from painfully recreating the speech of popular caricatures. This is no different.

Picaninny Freeze

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Product: Frozen Dessert
Circa: 1920s


Spike Lee borrowed the imagery from this ad for the poster of his film Bamboozled. If you haven't seen it, go do so now.

Uncle Remus Syrup

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Product: Syrup
Circa: 1920s


You'll notice that Uncle Remus is holding a box of his own syrup. Staring at this ad is like disappearing into a hall of mirrors. We're paraphrasing Sally Draper's Land O'Lakes spiel, by the way.

Cream of Wheat (II)

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Product: Cereal
Circa: 1910s


The second, and final, appearance of Rastus in this gallery. The image of the dog is surprisingly violent.

Korn Kinks

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Product: Cereal
Circa: 1910s


The ad for this Corn Flakes-type breakfast dish originally appeared on postcards.

Cream of Wheat (I)

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Product: Cereal
Circa: 1910s


Rastus, the unfortunately named face of Cream of Wheat, demonstrates his poor English in this early ad. He still appears on iconography associated with the brand, meaning our head shaking continues indefinitely.

Redskin Peaches

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Product: Peaches
Circa: Early 20th Century


This is one of those epithets our culture can't seem to shake. Fortunately, though, you can't waltz into the grocery store and pick up a crate of this produce any more.

Niggerhead Oysters

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Product: Oysters
Circa: Early 20th Century


One of the most explicit examples we've ever laid eyes on.

Unknown Spanish-Language Cookie Advertisement

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Product: Cookies
Circa: Early 20th Century


This tin advertisement for an unknown cookie company offers a look at a number of different stereotypes. Equal opportunity for hate.

Aunt Jemima (l)

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Product: Pancake Flour
Circa: 1890s


The face of America's favorite breakfast mix was a riff on the Mammy archetype. It took Aunt Jemima many years to shake this ugly stereotype. Here's one of the earliest incarnations.