(OK, if you don't believe me about the product described below, I've seen them. They made my jaw drop. I saw them in a drug store, so I assumed they were for medicinal use only. I didn't buy any (didn't think I could chew them) and forgot about it until I saw this article by Campbell Webster, which kind of says it all. The post-script is an ad for a related product which is probably just about as palatable.)
Last week, a bag of cookies caught me by surprise. This may seem unusual,
especially considering the location was a Charlottetown grocery box store,
where the most startling sight might be someone you haven't seen in a while,
and you would prefer to keep it that way. Large grocery stores have been
planned with the accuracy of a large-scale military invasion: their layout is
designed to comfort and entice, lulling you into overconsumption. Shock is not
the goal.
Still, not all plans are perfect, proof positive being the huge bags of cookies for sale, under the brand name, 'Bowel Buddy'. As you may have guessed, the Bowel Buddy cookie brand is particularly high in fibre, and therefore promises to keep your bowel moving at a pretty good clip. (An unusual need, it seems, at least taken from my three-month-old son's viewpoint, who needs no such buddy at any time of day or night).
Still, not all plans are perfect, proof positive being the huge bags of cookies for sale, under the brand name, 'Bowel Buddy'. As you may have guessed, the Bowel Buddy cookie brand is particularly high in fibre, and therefore promises to keep your bowel moving at a pretty good clip. (An unusual need, it seems, at least taken from my three-month-old son's viewpoint, who needs no such buddy at any time of day or night).
(Editor's note. Notice subtitle: "Snack on the GO and get regular!" Yum.)
What is startling about the Bowel Buddy is that we usually don't name our foods after their last stop in our bodies; sewage being something that in many ways is the anti-thesis of food. Even more amazing is that somebody had to come up with this name, or perhaps a few people, on salary no less, delivering this brand name to the market. It stimulates the imagination, this stimulating cookie, as to how the cookie company settled on a name which is the marriage of friendship with an excrement organ.
"Marketing! Get in here! We've got a heck of a new cookie! It'll clean you out faster than a truckload of raisin bran. Need a name by Monday!"
And so the naming process may have begun, begging the question: What names finished out of the top spot? Rectal Recess? Anal Allies? Sphincter Sojourn? And did somebody shout, "Eureka!" or "Bingo - Bowel Buddy!" when the winning name for the cleaning cookie was declared?
Health claims for foods is, of course, a heated battlefield, with aisle after aisle of packaged foods screaming their benefits to your longevity, energy levels etc. Accordingly, the pursuit of your dollar can be as much about the name and the claim of the food as it is about the food itself. As a result, truth is constantly endangered with amazing product claims like Campbell's Soup products claiming to have "25 per cent less sodium". This is an accurate statement, except that it is still a very high amount of sodium, and might as well say, "25 per cent less sodium . . . than the Dead Sea."
Government regulatory bodies attempt to assist us by forcing manufacturers to
be accurate in their naming strategies, leading to products such as 'grated
cheese flavoured product' and 'real juice-flavoured beverage' (i.e. no cheese
or juice is involved in either product.) Painfully awkward descriptions such as
these no doubt sends cookie companies and other food manufacturers to break the
mold, and come up with branding like the Bowel Buddy, which just seems
ridiculous, and even likely to repel consumers.
Or will it? I bought two bags.
Campbell Webster is a writer and producer of entertainment events. He can be reached at campbell@campbellwebster.ca
Or will it? I bought two bags.
Campbell Webster is a writer and producer of entertainment events. He can be reached at campbell@campbellwebster.ca
Whinny Wafer
Homemade Horse Cookies
www.WhinnyWafers.webs.com
Making homemade horse cookies, with no preservatives, or any of those items we can't pronounce
All cookies will be cooked and ready to mail to your location
Taking bulk orders as well.
http://members.shaw.ca/margaret_gunning/betterthanlife.htm
Homemade Horse Cookies
www.WhinnyWafers.webs.com
Making homemade horse cookies, with no preservatives, or any of those items we can't pronounce
All cookies will be cooked and ready to mail to your location
Taking bulk orders as well.
http://members.shaw.ca/margaret_gunning/betterthanlife.htm
Laffing so hard I may not need any Bowel Buddies tonite...oops. They shoulda called 'em "Sliders," which is what we call White Castle hamburgers because they slide right on thru. Sphincter Sojourn has a sophisticated sound to it, tho.
ReplyDeleteI think I'd rather eat those horse puckies. They look more appealing (but God knows what they're made of).
ReplyDelete