{"id":6557,"date":"2011-07-19T09:00:51","date_gmt":"2011-07-19T08:00:51","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=6557"},"modified":"2011-07-19T09:00:51","modified_gmt":"2011-07-19T08:00:51","slug":"found-feminism-how-i-stopped-worrying-and-learned-to-say-no-to-the-special-k-lady","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2011\/07\/19\/found-feminism-how-i-stopped-worrying-and-learned-to-say-no-to-the-special-k-lady\/","title":{"rendered":"Found Feminism: How I Stopped Worrying And Learned To Say No To The Special K Lady"},"content":{"rendered":"
Just in case anyone hasn’t seen this rather gratifying piece of graffiti, I’m borrowing the Found Feminism mic to extend its reach.<\/p>\n
@annarchism<\/a> on Twitter took
this shot on Mill Road, Cambridge.<\/p>\n
Special K is one of those things I’ll happily eat for breakfast, or if I
feel like eating cereal. The berry edition is kinda okay. The Special K
diet<\/em>, on the other hand, is about as special and remarkable as white
in a snowstorm, especially when you realise that you’ll get a more
interesting bunch of flavours from taking your hungover colleague up on the
offer when they dare you to shove your own face into the shredder tray at
work and explore whether it can double as a food trough. The entire diet is
marketed towards going down a jeans size as fast as is humanly possible for
\u00a33.89. (I have already mastered going down four jeans sizes without
paying any money. I just walk out of H&M and into M&S.)<\/p>\n
But! Aside from the fact the diet is as useful and realistic to genuine
lasting weightloss – or healthy living – as wearing a loaded
fruit bowl on your head, and
aside<\/em> from the fact that these ads are flagged squarely at
certain kinds of gendered insecurity that make me go “Shine? Shine
on fire, Kellogg. Right on
fire<\/em>“, a quick look at some history of Special K’s
posters is an interesting little trip to go on.<\/p>\n
Because it didn’t used to hang quite this way, ironically.
Kellogg launched Special K in 1955, when my mum was toddling and the
NHS was just hitting a ripe old age of seven. It was,
Kellogg’s big proud blue-and-white “history site”
informs me, “the
first high-protein breakfast cereal ever offered to
consumers.”<\/a> Two years before, they’d launched
“melba-toasted PEP flakes”, which … yeah. The
Fifties. I don’t even.1<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n
Here’s
a Special K poster from that era, in which the elderly, man and
woman alike, are DISCOMBOBULATED BY THE SHEER IMPACT OF
KELLOGG’S NUTRITIONAL PROMISE.<\/a> However, neither of
them are particularly bothered about
dress sizes<\/em> at this particular historical juncture.
(There’s been a War on, you know.)<\/p>\n
There is something distinctly strange about the vintage
poster looking kinder to women as consumers than the
now-poster, is what I’m saying. Especially given our
common habit of dissing our idea of the Fifties as some sort
of comparative hell for that hackneyed GCSE-textbook
concept, “the role of women”. Holding forth in
the pub, you might crack one about how ads like Special K
Lady
look <\/em>like they fell “out of the 1950s”,
until you remember that in the 1950s they were just
ditching rationing and things like bananas were
riveting news<\/a>. So maybe nobody wanted to goddamn well
eat any more cardboard than they really bloody had to.
This is not to say that things were better then (I also
found an ad showing a bikini-clad woman trying to touch
her toes with the slogan
IT’S TIME FOR JELLO<\/em>) but they’re not
really much better at all now, are they, which gives me
quite a bit of uncomfy pause for thought. Yes, following
on from (in the UK) the Ministry of Food and Doctor
Carrot<\/a> and all, there was a real focus on
nutrition, convenience foods, and how (or whether) these
could be combined – and I mean, yeah, Kellogg were
good at playing with that, with slogans like
Teen-agers welcome a new protein cereal that helps
you have – A FINE BODY<\/em>. But it
wasn’t quite “Is your man off checking out
a
peppier<\/em> model? Never mind
The Second Sex<\/em>! Give dinner the shove!
Subsist instead on Special K until your tastebuds
fair expire from unparalleled wheaty boredom, and
a prevailing vague suspicion that life really
should, by now, be a bit more fun.”<\/p>\n
Hurrah for you, therefore, Cambridge-based
graffiti warrior. You are hereby awarded one
BadRep salute, and we have dedicated breakfast
in your honour.<\/p>\n
Not a cardboard flake in sight.<\/p>\n