McDonald’s Stoops to New Low With Report Card Advertising

mcdonalds_report_card.jpg

Hey kids! Guess what? If you study hard and get good grades, guess what you’ll get? No, not a college scholarship, sillys. That would be too boring. No, if you get good grades on your report card, you’ll get a Happy Meal coupon on the card that you can use to get fat…uh…have a free lunch.

Yea, people, you read that right. In-school advertising’s idiocy has spread to report cards. Yes, report cards. For covering the paltry $1,600 printing cost of Seminole County Florida’s 2007-2008 report cards, McDonald’s was able to place the coupon on the report cards of kids who received all A’s and B’s. Yes, you also read that right. Only smart kids are allowed to get fat.

It’s not the first time a marketer has done something like this and it won’t be the last. Our view? Let kids live at least a tiny part of their lives unfettered by the not so morally forthright influence of marketers who, while they say they’re all about education and health, really just care about whether or not you slap down some cash on the counter.

With girls dressing like thong-clad porn stars by age 12 and boys emulating “we cool ’cause we got gold teeth, drink Crystal and fuck hoes all day” rappers, we should really do all we can to shelter kids from the idiocy we have to deal with as adults. Yes, yes, yes, we have to prepare children for the real world and a Happy Meal now and then isn’t going to turn a kid into an overweight serial killer but really. Ads on reports cards? That’s just crossing some kind of line that shouldn’t be crossed. Call us high and mighty but there are some things in this world that should never ever be commercialized. School report cards are one of them.

If parents want to reward their kids for getting good grades, they are intelligent enough to determine what kind of reward, if any, is appropriate. They don’t need any help from a marketer that just wants a wider audience to further fatten its bottom line.

Picture of Steve Hall

Steve Hall

RECENT ARTICLES

TRENDING AROUND THE WEB

The generation that was never allowed to be tired, never allowed to be lost, never allowed to need anything from anyone is now sitting in quiet houses in their late 60s and 70s wondering why a lifetime of being needed by everyone left them feeling known by no one

The generation that was never allowed to be tired, never allowed to be lost, never allowed to need anything from anyone is now sitting in quiet houses in their late 60s and 70s wondering why a lifetime of being needed by everyone left them feeling known by no one

Global English Editing

The real reason your aging father who never expressed emotion in sixty years of marriage openly weeps when the family dog dies isn’t sentimentality. The dog was the one relationship where he was allowed to be soft without it being questioned, and the grief isn’t just about the animal, it’s about losing the only door he ever found for the feelings he was raised to lock away

The real reason your aging father who never expressed emotion in sixty years of marriage openly weeps when the family dog dies isn’t sentimentality. The dog was the one relationship where he was allowed to be soft without it being questioned, and the grief isn’t just about the animal, it’s about losing the only door he ever found for the feelings he was raised to lock away

Global English Editing

My daughter described her childhood to a friend last week and I overheard it from the next room—and the mother she described wasn’t cruel or cold, she was just less present than I remember being, less patient than I thought I was, and less fun than I tried to be—and the distance between the mother I performed and the mother she received is a gap I can hear but never close because her version is the only one that counts

My daughter described her childhood to a friend last week and I overheard it from the next room—and the mother she described wasn’t cruel or cold, she was just less present than I remember being, less patient than I thought I was, and less fun than I tried to be—and the distance between the mother I performed and the mother she received is a gap I can hear but never close because her version is the only one that counts

Global English Editing

Psychology says the people who check on everyone but are never checked on aren’t stronger than everyone else. They just learned very early that their pain made other people uncomfortable, so they stopped presenting it.

Psychology says the people who check on everyone but are never checked on aren’t stronger than everyone else. They just learned very early that their pain made other people uncomfortable, so they stopped presenting it.

Global English Editing

Psychologists explain that married people who feel lonely rarely lack companionship. They lack witness. Someone is in the house, someone is at the table, but no one is tracking the interior life happening behind their eyes, and that specific absence registers as invisibility, not solitude

Psychologists explain that married people who feel lonely rarely lack companionship. They lack witness. Someone is in the house, someone is at the table, but no one is tracking the interior life happening behind their eyes, and that specific absence registers as invisibility, not solitude

Global English Editing

A life coach explains that the friends who preserve your sanity during hardship aren’t the ones who say ‘everything happens for a reason’ — they’re the ones who can witness your anger and despair without trying to redirect you toward gratitude or hope

A life coach explains that the friends who preserve your sanity during hardship aren’t the ones who say ‘everything happens for a reason’ — they’re the ones who can witness your anger and despair without trying to redirect you toward gratitude or hope

Global English Editing