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Child Advocates Slam Greenwashing of Seuss' Beloved 'Lorax'
I Am the Lorax, and I Speak for the... Corporations?
Environmentalists and child advocates are raising warning flags this week over the consumer-driven, corporate-sponsored ad campaigns and product tie-ins surrounding the movie version of Dr. Suess' 'The Lorax'. One of the most beloved children's book authors of all time, Dr. Seuss published his environmental parable in 1971.
Click to join the CCFC's campaign to 'Save the Lorax'
Generations of children have been moved by its powerful tale of how rampant greed and consumerism destroyed the forest of Truffula Trees and the Brown Bar-ba-loots, Swomee-Swans, and Humming-Fish that depended on them. But now, according to the Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood (CCFC), the book’s powerful message is in danger of being crushed by a real-life landslide of corporate greed after Dr. Seuss Enterprises, Random House, and Universal Pictures produced the film and sold licenses for the various product agreements.
In a statement accouncing their new campaign to 'Save the Lorax!' the CCFC writes:
For more than forty years, Dr. Seuss's classic book, The Lorax, has been a clarion call for reducing consumption and promoting conservation. But this Friday, Universal Pictures' The Lorax arrives in theaters with dozens of corporate partners promoting everything from SUVs to Pottery Barn to Pancakes.
For the campaign, the CCFC is urging anyone who cares about The Lorax’s original message to enjoy the story but pledge to shun the movie’s commercial tie-ins, including:
- The new Mazda CX-5 SUV—the only car with the "Truffula Seal of Approval."
- Seventh Generation household products and diapers festooned with the Lorax.
- IHOP's kids' menu items like Rooty Tooty Bar-Ba-Looty Blueberry Cone Cakes and Truffula Chip Pancakes.
- In-store promotions featuring the Lorax at Whole Foods, Pottery Barn Kids, and Target.
- Online Lorax games and sweepstakes for YoKids Yogurt, Comcast Xfinity TV, Target, IHOP, and HP.
- HP's "Every Inkling Makes a Difference," a branded in-school curriculum produced and distributed by Scholastic.
“It is both cynical and hypocritical to use a beloved children’s story with a prescient environmental message to sell kids on consumption,” said CCFC’s director, Dr. Susan Linn.
Read the book with your children. See the movie if you must. But tell the corporations that have kidnapped the Lorax you want nothing to do with their greenwashed products. --Campaign for a Commerical-Free Childhood
“The Lorax that so many of us know and love would never immerse children in the false corporate narrative that we can consume our way to everything, from happiness to sustainability. Instead, he would join everyone who cares about children and the environment to give kids time and space to grow up free of commercial pressures.”
Ed Gillespie, writing in The Guardian this week, takes specific target of Mazda's use of the movie to push its latest SUV:
Using cartoon characters in marketing tie-ins is nothing new – The Incredibles and McDonalds or Toy Story and Burger King, for example – but there's something about the connection between Mazda and the Lorax which leaves a particularly unpleasant taste in the mouth.
Renowned in Dr Seuss's fable as "speaking for the trees", the Lorax fights the environmental destruction wrought by the faceless Once-ler. To take the wise Lorax and use his integrity to help flog what is a really rather ordinary and unimpressive vehicle is downright character assassination. The Lorax has been well and truly carjacked.
Here's the current Mazda commercial running in the US:
“The car industry has been advertising to children for years,” said Catherine Lutz, Professor and Chair of Brown University’s Department of Anthropology, and Anne Fernandez, co-authors of Carjacked: The Culture of the Automobile and Its Effect on Our Lives. “But the real poke in the eye of this ad campaign is its deceptive message to children and their parents that buying an SUV can save the planet from the environmental destruction that auto manufacturing, auto emissions, and auto sprawl has wrought.”
Popular satirist Stephen Colbert also weighed in with two thumbs up for movie, saying "As we all know, the more product tie-ins, the more good something is." Watch:
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Help your children really be like the Lorax. Sign the pledge to shun The Lorax’s corporate cross-promotions and urge your friends and family to do the same.
Spread the Word!
Click here to email family and friends about this campaign.
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35 Comments so far
Show AllPoor Dr. Suess. I buy a lot of kids books, after this I'll only be buying Dr. Suess USED.
Why shouldn't we vow to not see the movie itself? Didn't Geisel's heirs sell out with this, and so why should we reward them with our movie dollars for doing so? A percentage of the gate money goes to the people responsible for this, and bigger ticket sales statistics at least indirectly prop up the promotional turds.
"Dr. Seuss Enterprises" - creepy enough.
A somewhat counter-argument is that all the Seuss TV specials in the 70s or whenever, *when he was alive*, were produced and sold to TV *knowing* that all kinds of shit would be hawked on the commercials in between. So is this any worse?
One, I hate these kinds of oily arguments. Two, yes, this is worse.
Poor Dr. Seuss is spinning in his grave like a top. This shares the prize with the McDonalds happy-meal tie-in for the movie Babe for the most cynically vicious soul-deadening travesty of the author's intent.
Everything beautiful, wholesome, profound and life-affirming that corporations touch turn to steaming piles of ordure. And they rub our faces in it with glee when we hand our money to them for doing it.
Mocking the right's insanity is really picking very low hanging fruit, but it's not their choice of the boycott tactic that is insane.
The corrupting youth/tradition comparison is a question of values, but that doesn't in any way mean the Left should shun the protection of children.
How many times did you pause from typing the above to wring your hands...
Thee is NO symmetry between the right taking action in service to their lunatic oposition to all things compassionate, and the left taking action in defense of compassion, on in this specific case, the co-optation co-optation of compassion.
For furthur confusion check out flic Magic Trip and tell me if that's Jerry painting the bus.
In Canada I am allowed to watch the Mazda commercial but am not allowed to watch the Colbert video because the Hulu video library can only be streamed in the United States. However, if I give them my email address they will let me know if and when the clip is available to me in Canada.
I can find the Colbert video somewhere on the net if I want to, except that today I do not want to watch it badly enough to do so. When I am reading political comment and go to follow a link inside it, and find that I am not allowed to access the link to see and listen to the thoughts expressed in it I feel that my access to free speech and debate has again been slightly compromised.
As a species, we will have no such blessing this time.
“The bourgeoisie, wherever it has got the upper hand, has put an end to all feudal, patriarchal, idyllic relations. It has pitilessly torn asunder the motley feudal ties that bound man to his ‘natural superiors’, and has left remaining no other nexus between person and person than naked self-interest, than callous ‘cash payment’. It has drowned the most heavenly ecstasies of religious fervour, of chivalrous enthusiasm, of philistine sentimentalism, in the icy water of egotistical calculation. It has resolved personal worth into exchange value, and in place of the numberless indefeasible chartered freedoms, has set up that single, unconscionable freedom – Free Trade.”
- Marx, again
Yunz should all give Marx's' CM a read. It is brief, and still incredibly modern if its critique.