Spokestoon

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An established cartoon character who is hired to endorse a product, a spokestoon should not be equated with a cartoon character invented specifically to give identity to a product, such as the Michelin Man, Speedy Alka-Seltzer or the Pillsbury Doughboy. For these and more, see List of advertising characters.

When the United States entered World War II, well-known celebrities already highly placed in American popular culture, such as Donald Duck and Bugs Bunny, joined the war effort, donating their highly visible images for patriotic and informative cartoons. Bambi was the precursor of Smokey, loaned by Walt Disney for one year (1943) to the US Forest Service.

Since then, many high-profile celebrity toons have turned their skills to corporate product placement. Though fast food franchises have used gimmicks to tie-in temporarily with current releases of animated features since the 1950s, a few toons have become more permanently associated with a product or service offered by corporate culture and may be considered genuine spokestoons.

Early recorded usages of "spokestoon", in newspaper articles of October 1995 related to the Disney Corporation's use of characters from The Lion King to promote good nutrition in children,[1] were preceded by a March 25 1995 feature in the Portland, Maine Press Herald, noting "Buster Brown, the comic strip character who became the "spokestoon" for the children's shoe line."[2]

Among these spokestoons and the products they are identified with:

[edit] References

  1. ^ Washington Post news story, "Disney School Lunch `Spokestoons' Leave Lawmaker With Sour Taste," October 9, 1995.
  2. ^ Highbeam.com: "Spokestoon"