Aunt Jemima Has a New Name: Pearl Milling
09 Fevereiro 2021 - 10:27PM
Dow Jones News
By Jennifer Maloney
Aunt Jemima is now Pearl Milling Co.
The PepsiCo Inc. unit that sells Aunt Jemima pancake products
unveiled the new name on Tuesday, officially retiring a brand that
had come under criticism for its origins in racist imagery of Black
people.
Pearl Milling Co. was the creator of the original self-rising
pancake mix, first marketed as "Self-Rising Pancake Flour" before
it was trademarked in 1890 under the Aunt Jemima brand.
The new packaging, which will appear in June, will retain much
of the current colors and design. The company had already dropped
the image of a Black woman from its bottles and boxes.
"Our changes are in line with PepsiCo's journey toward racial
equality, and the evolution will help carry the 130-year-old brand
into the future, " PepsiCo said.
PepsiCo was one of several brand owners that said they would
rethink their products and marketing as the U.S. was confronting
systemic racism after the killing of George Floyd, an
African-American, in police custody last summer.
Mars Inc. said it would change the name of Uncle Ben's rice to
Ben's Original and drop the image of a bow-tied Black man from its
packaging. The maker of Cream of Wheat said the image of a Black
chef would be removed from Cream of Wheat's packaging, and the name
of Eskimo Pie was changed to Edy's Pie.
Aunt Jemima's founders bought the Missouri-based company in
1888, then began a search for a novel product all Americans would
eat, according to the book "Aunt Jemima, Uncle Ben and Rastus," by
Marilyn Kern-Foxworth. They settled on pancakes, and perfected
their mix in 1889. The brand name was inspired by a popular song,
"Old Aunt Jemima," typically performed in minstrel shows by a white
man in blackface.
The brand's creators hired a former enslaved woman, Nancy Green,
to be its spokeswoman. She made her debut as Aunt Jemima at the
Chicago World's Columbian Exposition of 1893, singing, telling
stories and making pancakes outside a booth resembling a giant
flour barrel, according to the book "Black Hunger" by Doris Witt.
PepsiCo acquired the business when it bought Quaker Oats in
2001.
Write to Jennifer Maloney at jennifer.maloney@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
February 09, 2021 20:12 ET (01:12 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2021 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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