Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Baby Carrots

I just about died laughing the first time I saw one of those new baby carrot commercials on You Tube. My first thought was "...REALLY?" The commercials are completely ridiculous, complete with machine guns, carrot ammo, explosions and scantily clad women. I had recently heard a radio report on NPR on the new carrot marketing ploy, so I figured I should see the ad for myself. According to the radio report, "a bunch of carrot farmers" were trying to increase carrot sales essentially by marketing them as a junk food. There isn't a whisper about the health benefits of carrots or meeting your daily 5-veggies-a-day mark. The thing that makes the over the top ads bearable is that they know it's over the top. The machine guns and exploding shopping carts are certainly meant to draw the attention of young people, but they're also very clearly mocking similar commercials by the junk food industry. Their website is just as hilarious...they have a carrot video game (no, I didn't play it...looked tempting though), videos of their ads, another series of short videos called "Munchies" and even a "Karrut Kruunch Track" you can download (yep the sound of someone crunching a carrot...I know I want that as my ringtone!).


After learning more about this new craze, I started thinking...what exactly is a baby carrot, anyway? It took me a while to realize this, but baby carrots are not just miniature carrots. They're pieces of regular carrots that have been cut and peeled into "baby" sizes! When I learned this, I thought, what a waste...I bet a ton of perfectly good carrot is wasted just to make them into cute, peeled bite-sized pieces. Well, shows how much I know about carrots...that theory was also wrong. Baby carrots were actually created in the 1980s by farmer Mike Yurosek who wanted to find a way to use carrots that were too misshapen to sell but perfectly good to eat. Hmmm...makes me feel better about eating baby carrots if they actually reduce waste! (Of course, there are some issues with baby carrots...they cost more than buying an equivalent amount of whole carrots, but we're talking about getting kids to eat more veggies here...got to start small and make it easy! They are also grown from a variety of carrots that ripens faster and has less beta-carotene. Sigh...lower-quality food always seems to end up in schools. We'll save this issue for another time.)


Now that we're familiar with this new generation of carrot farmers who are more adept at social media than I am (not that hard to accomplish, honestly) and have figured out what a baby carrot is, there is one question outstanding in my mind: will this ploy actually work? I am all for healthier food in schools, but will the expensive commericals and new baby carrot vending machines actually make more kids eat vegetables? It's definitely true that brand recognition can have a major impact on food choices, especially if kids are exposed to it at a young age. However, real junk food has a leg-up over carrots: salty, fatty and sugary foods are tastes that are rare, and therefore valuable in nature. Biologically our brains are wired to desire those things (not to mention how unhealthy foods are frequently associated with comfort). I think the new carrot marketing will help increase the consumption of vegetables by young people, but I worry that it won't last. To significantly change food habits, I think the culture of food in schools needs to shift: away from serving what is cheapest and easiest to what is most healthful and truly tastes good. The point shouldn't be for vegetables and Doritos to compete to spend the most on advertising, but for us to appreciate, and teach our kids to appreciate, that healthy food can taste better than junk food and is better for you. Then perhaps kids will be eating carrots long after the fad fades away...

In case any of you were wondering, I got my information (and pictures) for this post from these sources:
www.babycarrots.com
Home website for the new marketing campaign. They have 3,000 likes on facebook!

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=130321785
NPR story on new baby carrots marketing campaign. Also includes links to these USDA sources:

http://healthymeals.nal.usda.gov/hsmrs/NJ%20Quick%20Steps/NJ_Qk_Steps_Participant/Carrots.pdf
Quick history and info on carrots.

http://www.ers.usda.gov/publications/vgs/2007/03Mar/VGS31901/VGS31901.pdf
Detailed report on carrot consumption in the US.

http://www.wisebread.com/baby-carrots-the-frugal-idea-that-isnt
Interesting blog post on baby carrots.

5 comments:

  1. Those commercials are even crazier than I imagined!

    I think I always fear that even if healthy, wonderful food is offered to kids in their schools, kids will just choose another less-healthy option. How do we get kids to choose carrots?! They'll always choose the fries or cookies! Like you mentioned, schools need to move away from creating a competition between foods and just serve what is beneficial to the children.

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  2. If carrots can be marketed as a healthy snack, other fruits and veggies can do the same. Dried fruits like papaya and mango are tasty and don't need refrigeration.

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  3. Recently I bought a 5# bag of regular ol' carrots, slightly gritty, and choc full of beta carotene. I guess I'm a purist. And wouldn't it be lovely if the ad campaign could convey the benefits of eating a diverse diet rich in fruits and vegetables (plural--more than just carrots). Your post also evoked memories of cafeteria pizza that resembled roofing shingles in size, shape, and texture. Gross. I'm glad they're at least serving carrots.

    Oh and the Xtreme Xrunch Kart app game (85.7mb!) is not compatible with my 15-month-old iPod Touch gen 2. I guess I'm just behind the times!

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  4. Nothing wrong with blogspot TLD blogs, but you really should just use Word Press and install it @ relayfoods.com/local-food/blogs/ or something.

    Just from reading the main page here it is a miss, images are not loading for me, making ready weird columned words hard to read. and the links at the bottom arent links. And many of them have % encoding in the links for spaces meaning not only cant they be clicked for those intererested and so inclined, but they cannot even copy and paste them due to % (space) errors in the links. So to get to those links one would need to manually type them in, blah to that.

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  5. Thanks for your thoughts, Elijah. We're hoping to update to a new blog interface soon, but we want it to be seamlessly compatible with our website (which apparently WordPress is not). Slowly but surely...

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