What? Obama Chicken Fingers?

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GTaudiophile

Lifer
Oct 24, 2000
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A German frozen food company hopes to raise sales with a new product: Obama fingers. The tender, fried chicken bits come with a tasty curry sauce. The company says it was unaware of the possible racist overtones of the product.

Selling products has, of course, become a bit more difficult than usual these days. No wonder then that companies everywhere are turning to optimistic marketing messages in an effort to counteract the steady drum beat of negativity coming from front page headlines around the globe.

Many sales executives have drawn the same conclusion: What better poster child for hope than US President Barack Obama? There are Obama dolls, Obama T-shirts, Obama soap-on-a-rope. There is even Obama thong underwear on offer.

Not wanting to miss the boat, a German food company has now gotten into the act. Sprehe, a company that has all manner of frozen delicacies on offer, has come up with a new product it calls "Obama Fingers." Far from being real digits, though, the "fingers" in question are "tender, juicy pieces of chicken breast, coated and fried," as the product packaging claims.

Fried chicken, in other words. With a curry dip.

"We noticed that American products and the American way of eating are trendy at the moment," Judith Witting, sales manager for Sprehe, told SPIEGEL ONLINE. "Americans are more relaxed. Not like us stiff Germans, like (Chancellor Angela) Merkel."

The idea, she claimed, was to get in on the Obama-mania which is continuing to grip Germany. The word "fingers" in the name refers to the fact that it is a finger food. "It's like hotdogs," Witting said. "No one would ever think they are actually from dogs."

For Americans in Germany, though, there is a risk that the product might be seen as racially insensitive. Fried chicken has long been associated with African-Americans in the US -- naming strips of fried chicken after the first black president could cause some furrowing of brows.

Witting told SPIEGEL ONLINE the connection never even occurred to her. "It was supposed to be a homage to the American lifestyle and the new US president," she said.

Pics

 

glenn1

Lifer
Sep 6, 2000
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Originally posted by: GTaudiophile

For Americans in Germany, though, there is a risk that the product might be seen as racially insensitive. Fried chicken has long been associated with African-Americans in the US -- naming strips of fried chicken after the first black president could cause some furrowing of brows.

Only if those Americans in Germany are retards.
 

jpeyton

Moderator in SFF, Notebooks, Pre-Built/Barebones
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Aug 23, 2003
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They got the free press they wanted.
 

Schadenfroh

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Mar 8, 2003
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Originally posted by: GTaudiophile
Fried chicken has long been associated with African-Americans in the US

I have never understood this stereotype being specific to blacks. If anything, it should cover most southerners (at least in my area).

I eat fried chicken usually for one meal a day (be it lunch / supper chicken strips or fried chicken patty on a biscuit). My favorite vegetables are green beans, cabbage and okra (when all three are boiled with bacon or pork fat, the okra can be fried with ). I also find that this food goes best with jalapeno cornbread (cooked hard in a cast iron skillet). I eat a meal with all of the above usually for lunch three days a week when my schedule permits me to drive 30 minutes from the university to a "soul food" restaurant (owned by a white guy who usually eats lunch there everyday and the staff is about 75 / 25 (back / white)). I would say that 70% of my fellow customers are white, 30% black and this is in a town that is majority black.

My grandfather and uncle both eat boiled chitlins and drive to an establishment that serves them on Wednesdays (they drive about 35 / 40 minutes to get there, so it is out of their way). The rest of my family eats food similar to what I eat, all of us are white.
 

frostedflakes

Diamond Member
Mar 1, 2005
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Heh.

Is "Obama-mania" really that big overseas? I mean don't get me wrong, I like the guy, but come on.
 

Skyclad1uhm1

Lifer
Aug 10, 2001
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Originally posted by: frostedflakes
Heh.

Is "Obama-mania" really that big overseas? I mean don't get me wrong, I like the guy, but come on.

A lot of people in Europe are glad the US finally got rid of Bush. Him and his freaks being removed from office is like Al Qaida getting kicked out of Pakistan by the Pakistani population, a move many would welcome.

People hope Obama will actually bring the US back into the civilized world, to a state where human rights mean something.
 

Hayabusa Rider

Admin Emeritus & Elite Member
Jan 26, 2000
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Someone needs a life. If everyone had to be so sensitive to offending people at this level, no one could do anything.
 

Robor

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Oct 9, 1999
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Are they naming them after Obama because he's black or because he's popular? I suspect the latter.
 

ElFenix

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Mar 20, 2000
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if eating delicious fried chicken is racist then i must be wearing a sheet in public
 

zinfamous

No Lifer
Jul 12, 2006
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Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
Originally posted by: GTaudiophile
Fried chicken has long been associated with African-Americans in the US

I have never understood this stereotype being specific to blacks. If anything, it should cover most southerners (at least in my area).

I eat fried chicken usually for one meal a day (be it lunch / supper chicken strips or fried chicken patty on a biscuit). My favorite vegetables are green beans, cabbage and okra (when all three are boiled with bacon or pork fat, the okra can be fried with ). I also find that this food goes best with jalapeno cornbread (cooked hard in a cast iron skillet). I eat a meal with all of the above usually for lunch three days a week when my schedule permits me to drive 30 minutes from the university to a "soul food" restaurant (owned by a white guy who usually eats lunch there everyday and the staff is about 75 / 25 (back / white)). I would say that 70% of my fellow customers are white, 30% black and this is in a town that is majority black.

My grandfather and uncle both eat boiled chitlins and drive to an establishment that serves them on Wednesdays (they drive about 35 / 40 minutes to get there, so it is out of their way). The rest of my family eats food similar to what I eat, all of us are white.

Yeah, I'm from the south too and I'd say Fried Chicken is maybe 50% of my diet, when I was living there/visiting.

I guess it comes about b/c traditionally, blacks outnumber whites by a large margin in the South, so:

South = Fried Chicken
Black = South
Fried Chicken = Black
 
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