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Ronald McDonald's Midlife Crisis

CHRISTINA REXRODE   05/17/11 05:03 PM ET   AP

Ronald Mcdonald

NEW YORK — Ronald McDonald is having a midlife crisis.

His floppy shoes, painted-on smile and flaming-red hair may be a harder sell to today's kids who are trading in their dolls and trucks for manicures and mobile game apps at ever younger ages. He also seems out of step with McDonald's Corp.'s new efforts to appeal to adults. The 48-year-old spokesclown has fallen flat in new ads this year, according to Ace Metrix, a group that tracks TV advertising.

And the government is getting strict on marketing unhealthy food to children. That has both marginalized Ronald as more of a mascot than a product pitchman and landed him in the middle of the bigger debate about food makers' responsibilities in stemming the rise in childhood obesity.

McDonald's says it is proud of the food it offers and that Ronald teaches children to be active.

Critics say it's time to hang up the yellow jumper.

A group called Corporate Accountability International plans to ask Ronald to retire at the company's annual meeting on Thursday. They say Ronald encourages kids to eat junk food, contributing to a rise in childhood obesity and related diseases such as diabetes.

The group, which campaigned against the Joe Camel cigarette mascot in the '90s and complained about Ronald as a role model at McDonald's annual meeting last year, has stepped up its campaign. The group has taken out full-page ads Wednesday in the Chicago Sun-Times, New York Metro and four other papers to call for his head. The ads, signed by more than 550 health groups and professionals, carry the headline, "Doctors' Orders: Stop Marketing Junk Food To Kids."

What follows is an open letter to McDonald's CEO Jim Skinner, that says in part, "We ask that you heed our concern and retire your marketing promotions for food high in salt, fat, sugar, and calories to children, whatever form they take – from Ronald McDonald to toy giveaways."

McDonald's defended Ronald against the group's attack at last year's annual meeting and is adamant that it has never considered retiring or even downplaying their smiling mascot.

"It's totally unfounded," said Marlena Peleo-Lazar, the company's chief creative officer, who describes Ronald as "a force for good."

Ronald, the world's most famous clown, had humble beginnings with a paper-cup nose and scraggly blonde wig. First played by Willard Scott in 1963, he dispensed burgers and fries to delighted children and flew around on a magic hamburger. "Goofy and clumsy" is the way McDonald's describes the early incarnations.

A decade later McDonald's created standards on makeup and mannerisms for Ronald, so the actors who portrayed him could present a united front. Around that time, they also created McDonaldLand, home to Grimace, Mayor McCheese and an array of other characters.

(McDonald's, for the record, views Ronald as a real person. "There's only one Ronald," Peleo-Lazar said in response to several questions about how many actors portray the smiling clown.)

Around 2004, McDonald's christened Ronald as a "balanced, active lifestyles ambassador," and stuck him in commercials where he trained for the Olympics. He got workout clothes. He got a tuxedo. He moved from McDonaldLand into the real world. New commercials show him as an active, athletic clown who plays soccer, shoots hoops and encourages kids to visit McDonald's Happymeal.com website. There's barely a mention of burgers and fries.

While other clowns have faded, Ronald has endured. He's been immortalized as a Beanie Baby, a bobblehead and a balloon in the Macy's Thanksgiving parade. Even now, Zagat says he's the most popular fast-food mascot, beating out Jared the Subway Guy.

"It would be tough to walk away from him," said Nigel Hollis, whose company, Millward Brown Optimor, calculates that McDonald's is the fourth-most valuable brand in the world. "It would be almost as if the Geico gecko disappeared, or the Aflac duck."

But Jack McKee, vice president of sales and marketing at Ace Metrix, said new Ronald McDonald commercials have failed to entice test audiences. His company surveyed 500 people about each commercial, he said.

"It's really remarkable how often I saw the word 'creepy'" in the survey comments, McKee said.

Replies Peleo-Lazar: "For everyone who may feel that way, there are more who feel the opposite."

Through the years, Ronald has also been the face of Ronald McDonald House Charities, which provides free or inexpensive housing for families who must travel to get medical treatment for a child. He still shows up as often as ever at camps for sick children and charity events.

Nick Guroff, a spokesman for Corporate Accountability International, said while that's a worthwhile charity, "to use that as their excuse for marketing junk food to kids is sort of having their burger and eating it too."

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NEW YORK — Ronald McDonald is having a midlife crisis. His floppy shoes, painted-on smile and flaming-red hair may be a harder sell to today's kids who are trading in their dolls and trucks for...
NEW YORK — Ronald McDonald is having a midlife crisis. His floppy shoes, painted-on smile and flaming-red hair may be a harder sell to today's kids who are trading in their dolls and trucks for...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
El Chingaso
Fighting for mental superiority...
07:23 AM on 05/22/2011
Think about it: it's pretty sad when an American corporation has made billions of dollars selling harmful chemicals to kids...and adults. Just look at the ingredients in McD's menu items and no one in their right mind -- kid or adult -- would ever ingest such substances.

The so-called addictive flavors in McD's products are actually chemicals brewed up in laboratory bathtubs.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
coolfl33
10:28 PM on 05/19/2011
They can market all they want but it takes mommy and daddy to drive and get the food. So how do you justify going after Ronald when it is the parents that let their children watch the commercials, it is the parents that are providing the "drug". So isn't it mommy and daddy's fault that their children are fat? How the hell do you blame a company when it is the parents that must purchase the food.
Go arrest the parents for providing their children with the "drug". Last I check Ronald doesn't deliver.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
coolfl33
10:22 PM on 05/19/2011
What about the companies that make and sell televisions. I mean without televisions the children wouldn't see those evil McDonald Ads.
The last I checked the children can't drive cars. So who is to blame for the child getting the posion McDonald's is selling?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
coolfl33
10:11 PM on 05/19/2011
Once again taking the blame from where it should be placed and putting it on someone else.

Why Ronald is my question? Why not cookie monster? Doesn't cookies cause obesity? And here you have a puppet whose main goal is to get and cram cookies down his throat. He makes a mess at the sametime. Watch out Cookie Monster.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
organicconnect
10:40 AM on 05/19/2011
I don't think Ronald is an issue worth worrying about. The real problem is that McDonalds is a "food" company that doesn't seem to be in the food business. Sure people buy it and eat it, but calling it food is the real stretch. The case could be made that they're engaged in false advertising. The Happy Meal is a case in point: http://organicconnectmag.com/wp/2011/01/why-the-happy-meal-is-a-crime-and-not-just-a-culinary-one/
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elsquibbs
Socially liberal, fiscally prudent atheist.
10:48 PM on 05/19/2011
My suggestion is to not eat there. If other people want to eat there, then they can do so.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
El Chingaso
Fighting for mental superiority...
09:22 AM on 05/19/2011
I really liked this line in the article, "McDonald's says it is proud of the food it offers and that Ronald teaches children to be active." Uh, right...

And cra-ck dealers are proud of the product(s) they serve...
05:29 AM on 05/19/2011
I believe Ronald McDonald represents a wise adult who encourages charity and healthy living. Keep him, please.
11:52 PM on 05/18/2011
whatever happened to birdie the early bird, the french fry guys, mayor mccheese, the hamburgular, the chicken nugget dudes, grimmace, and that quarter pounder dude that looked like a cop? what a shame..bring them all back..

for anyone who wishes to blame ronald for your genetic shortcomings..turn off your tv and go paint some old women's house in the hot sun all day if you want to loose weight..

if you are looking to do the world a favor, first shut your own pie hole..then go run through the woods in a loincloth and beat on a drum all day..

as for socialists or democrats or commies or republicans..everyone eats at mcdonalds..i bet you can go to any foreign country dressed like ronald and get laid in 10 seconds..

and what about twinkie the kid, burger king, the colonel, jack, wendy, the keebler elves or captain crunch? why don't we ban anything fun, creative and unique?
11:49 PM on 05/18/2011
If you are going to fire Ronald for bad parenting, why don't you fire all the teachers.
11:26 PM on 05/18/2011
gee what a concept , if you dont want you or the kids eating mcdonalds dont, leave anyone that wants to eat a mcdonalds alone , if enough people dont want to eat there they will change or close, really a simple concept heres anothers one , it ain't you or the goverments business.
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elsquibbs
Socially liberal, fiscally prudent atheist.
09:49 PM on 05/18/2011
I used to love the Cookie Crisp commercials. Chocolate chip cookies for breakfast, I needed some! Guess what? My mother said no. End of story.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jimmyaj
I don't need no micro-bio...
09:27 PM on 05/18/2011
ALL fast food is garbage. So is most of the frozen food one finds in grocery stores and, for that matter, a lot of what is served in some of the upscale restaurants. People who don't know how to buy good food and prepare it deserve to be fat.
09:24 PM on 05/18/2011
how bout lets leave the parenting up 2 the parents make them responsible 4 wat there kids eat... naw thats 2 easy lets make somebody else the scape goat for the wrong doings for the lack of intrest in wat children do
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AZreb
equal-opportunity Independent heathen
10:47 AM on 05/19/2011
fanned - Nope - no parental responsibility, no personal responsibility for anyone - blame everything on the advertising, the spokesperson, the menus but don't make anyone take responsibility for his/her own actions.

And forget the man who just ate his 25,000th Big Mac and is in great health - including cholesterol levels, heart, no diabetes or other problems.
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magus47
Liberal? Conservative? No. American.
09:06 PM on 05/18/2011
But of course it is junk food that causes obesity. Yes after a full days work the kids collect their wages and then take the bus to MacBonalds where they buy JUNK food before heading home to do the lawn. OH SHUT UP! Parents TAKE the kids to MacDonalds and the BUY the food. The PARENTS make the desicion and pay the bill. Stop blaming some stupid clown. It's lazy parents rasing lazy kids that makes the kids obese. STOP BLAMING EVERYONE ELSE.
08:55 PM on 05/18/2011
So, let me get this straight. Ronald McDonald travels the United States, driving children to their local McDonalds. I always knew that clowns were evil.