C
Casablanca
Guest
The current KFC television ad shows a well dressed Black middle class family sitting down for dinner with a bucket of KFC. That was fine but all they showed was a mother, a teen age daughter and son and one younger sibling. They all praised sitting down to dinner together but there was no mention of their father being absent from the dinner table.
Could it be that KFC is playing on the stereotype of a matriarchal image of the African-American family - no father in the home let alone the dinner table?
The non-verbal communication by KFC was to support and thereby make money off that stereotype. Did they or their ad agency, who I am sure did research before they cast the commercial, think that if they added a father to the dinner table scene that they might lose business like record producers fear they might lose business if they did not encourage rappers to use the N word or promote violence against Black women?
This is the exact message - the negative stereotypical KFC message - that Bill Cosby and Dr. Alan Poussant are railing against in their latest book and in their joint interview today with Tim Russert on Meet The Press. That is an interview all Americans of all races should see.
KFC should pull that ad immediately. It is doing more harm than anything Don Imus ever said.
KFC is profiteering off of negative African-American stereotypes and I am afraid they know exactly what they are doing in order to make a buck.
Perhaps, thinking African-American families as well as all American families should take their business elsewhere than KFC.
Could it be that KFC is playing on the stereotype of a matriarchal image of the African-American family - no father in the home let alone the dinner table?
The non-verbal communication by KFC was to support and thereby make money off that stereotype. Did they or their ad agency, who I am sure did research before they cast the commercial, think that if they added a father to the dinner table scene that they might lose business like record producers fear they might lose business if they did not encourage rappers to use the N word or promote violence against Black women?
This is the exact message - the negative stereotypical KFC message - that Bill Cosby and Dr. Alan Poussant are railing against in their latest book and in their joint interview today with Tim Russert on Meet The Press. That is an interview all Americans of all races should see.
KFC should pull that ad immediately. It is doing more harm than anything Don Imus ever said.
KFC is profiteering off of negative African-American stereotypes and I am afraid they know exactly what they are doing in order to make a buck.
Perhaps, thinking African-American families as well as all American families should take their business elsewhere than KFC.