It's true that some (not all) of these brand names were plain offensive. I'm a bit taken aback by Uncle Ben's rice though. I'd never heard that "uncle" thing being used to avoid using "Mr." To me, the portrait always simply represented a friendly, smiling uncle. Also, if we're calling him Ben with a single 'n', he wouldn't be "Mr Ben" anyway. Ben is conventionally a first name. Benn is a surname. And maybe his attire COULD represent him being a servant. It could equally suggest a successful businessman who runs his own rice empire. Has anybody, ever, seriously looked at a packet of Uncle Ben's rice and said "I can't buy this, it has a picture of a slave on it?" At this rate they will have to remove all black people and all ethnic themes and designs from packaging altogether, and I'm sure that's not in anybody's best interests.
(In)famous brands that changed their names due to public pressure
What's in a name?

Uncle Ben's

In September 2020, Mars Inc. bowed to public pressure and announced it would be changing the name of its iconic Uncle Ben's rice product range to Ben's Original and ditching the controversial packaging imagery. The term 'uncle' has historically been used by white people to refer to Black men, a derogatory title that meant they could avoid addressing people as 'Mr' or 'Sir'. Meanwhile, the image of the smiling elderly African-American man wearing what could be a servant's collar evokes the myth of happy servitude.
Aunt Jemima

The Uncle Ben's name change came hot on the heels of the retirement of PepsiCo's Aunt Jemima. Like Uncle Ben's, both the name and product imagery could be considered racist – in this case the use of 'Aunt' in a disrespectful way and the product picture, which evokes the racist 'Mammy' stereotype. Not everyone agrees, however, including the descendants of Aunt Jemima models Lillian Richard and Anna Short Harrington, who have objected to the rebrand. Since June 2021, the pancake mix and syrup products have been sold under the name Pearl Milling Company.
Mrs. Butterworth's

Rival syrup brand Mrs. Butterworth's also evokes the 'Mammy' stereotype with its bottle shaped in the form of a matronly woman. In June 2020, the brand's parent company Conagra acknowledged that its product could be perceived in a negative way and promised to conduct a complete brand and packaging review, which could include a name change. As of 2022, however, no official rebrand has been announced.
Coon cheese

Cleveland Indians

Sports teams with names that could be perceived as culturally insensitive at best and blatantly racist at worst haven't held back from rebranding, including the Cleveland Indians. The Indians' name and branding has been controversial for decades, with many people objecting to its stereotypical mascot and appropriation of Native American culture. After the Black Lives Matter protests in 2020 sparked conversations about institutional racism, the Cleveland Indians announced that they would change their name – and in July 2021 rebranded to the Cleveland Guardians. The name was inspired by the Guardians of Traffic sculptures, eight statues that stand on the Hope Memorial Bridge.
Washington Redskins

Staying with sports teams, the Washington Redskins finally dropped the Redskins part in 2020 after decades of pressure from activists, who associate the football team's name and imagery with harmful stereotypes. In fact, the decision came after sponsors Nike, FedEx and PepsiCo, acting on calls by investors, urged the team to drop the racist epithet. The club used the name Washington Football Team while it considered a new permanent name, and finally settled on the Washington Commanders.
Red Skins

Nestlé has renamed a brand of candy it sells in Australia called Red Skins for the same reason. The company released a statement in November 2020 admitting the brand was “out of the step” with Nestlé values and went on to change the product's name to Red Ripper. However, the new name wasn't a complete success either and raised more than a few eyebrows, given it's the nickname of an infamous Russian serial killer.
Chicos

Beso de Negra

Zigeuner Sauce

Sambo's

This restaurant chain, which had a South Indian boy as a mascot along with a racist name, once had 1,100 locations across the US. The last remaining Sambo's in Santa Barbara, California changed its name last year when members of the public, compelled to act by the Black Lives Matter movement, petitioned the owner. He initially rebranded as 'Peace and Love', then called the place Chad's after himself.
Dixie Beer

Used to refer to the American south, the word 'Dixie' is laden with connotations of slavery and racism, which has prompted an increasing number of brands that bear the name to drop it completely. Cue the beverage formally known as Dixie Beer. Mindful of the name's negative associations, the Big Easy's oldest brewery rebranded as the Faubourg Brewing Company in tribute to the “diverse neighbourhoods of New Orleans”.
Dixie Chicks

Lady Antebellum

Slaves

The same year, US band Slaves followed Dixie Chicks and Lady Antebellum and announced a name change, which its five members said had come about through their support of the Black Lives Matter movement and the realisation that the word is associated “with so much pain and hurt”. However, a UK band that also uses the name Slaves has refused to change its name, despite criticism that the term being used by a band of white men could be deemed racist. Guitarist Laurie Vincent explained: "If you pick up an Oxford dictionary and look up the word 'slaves', there is no mention of any racial context. A slave is a person who is owned by another person and forced to work for free."
Eskimo Pie

Edmonton Eskimos

Adding to the push to call time on the racist name, the Edmonton Eskimos Canadian football team also moved to change its moniker following months of consultation with the lnuit community. For a short period it was known as the Edmonton Football Team, continuing to use a logo that consisted of two interlinked letter Es. The president of the team, Chris Presson, reportedly hoped to keep this logo as well as the club's green and gold colour scheme. In June last year, the club officially revealed its rebrand to the Edmonton Elks.
Plantation Rum

Darlie

Spurred on by Black Lives Matter, the "Great Racist Purge", as one commentator has called it, reached far and wide in 2020. As a result, Colgate told the world that it was reviewing the name of its product Darlie, which is sold in Asia. Shockingly, the product was originally called Darkie and in China, the product name '黑人牙膏' still meant "Black person toothpaste". From March this year, the company will officially be rebranding the product to '好來', which in translation mirrors the product slogan: "good things come with a smile."
Fair & Lovely

Clean & Clear Fairness

White Perfect

Indiginous Gin

New Zealand's Indiginous Gin was blasted in early 2020 for cultural appropriation, as its label features a design based on a traditional Māori tattoo. The uproar prompted the company to ditch the label and it's also changed its name to Imagination Gin, after criticism of its play on the word 'indigenous' too.
Trader Ming's

Spic and Span

Thug Kitchen

Vegan cookbook brand Thug Kitchen was accused of "digital blackface" and exploiting Black culture due to the use of the word 'thug' in its name, before it eventually resolved to rebrand to Bad Manners in 2020. The LA-based company defended its use of the term, explaining that it wasn't so loaded when the brand was born in 2012.
Discover why the popularity of these products is bad news for millions
Geechie Boy Mill

Comments
-
REPORT This comment has been reported.
-
trevski2001
16 February 2021'tis said that when America sneezes, Britain catches a cold - and so it is being shown to be true. So some obscure reference to times long past in America, which I'd bet most Americans are not aware of, causes product branding to be redesigned here in Britain. Why should this be occurring now? My theory is that Blairs dream that half the world and its dog should have a degree is in large part to blame. Universities have become temples to PC and after having been indoctrinated for a number of years, students are excreted into the real world with degrees of little value. They have a choice = they can either flip burgers in the likes of McDonalds for little pay, or they can worm their way into institutions pandering to the perpetually offended, where six figure salaries are not uncommon.
REPORT This comment has been reported.3 -
JM1956
15 February 2021Remember right or wrong these issues have been picked up mostly by activists who aim in life is to go looking for these issues. Vast majority of people are not that bothered one way or the other yet companies listen to these activists. The bottom line is they are more worried about product sales than anything else. Dont worry about the low pay of the 'employees' their suppliers employ. Some of these might have some merit but others are nonsensical.
REPORT This comment has been reported.14
Do you want to comment on this article? You need to be signed in for this feature
17 February 2021