Shockvertising Food

Swedish Fish: A Friend You Can Eat

At first glance, this appears to be animal cruelty at its worst. These ads, with their deceptively bright and cheerful colours feature snuggly bunnies and teddy bears ready to be eaten.

The "A friend you can eat," campaign for Swedish Fish was created by ad agency, JWT, New York.

There's a Kitty Sandwich, a Grilled Teddy bear in a panini maker, a Bunny Waffle, a Chick in a Cone with sprinkles on top and a Doll Burger topped with lettuce and tomato.

But on the other side of these images, all of which say, "Nej" underneath, is a picture of a Swedish Fish, the "Friend you can eat!" with the word, "Ja" beneath it.

Shockvertising Food
Using dark or controversial imagery in food advertising to grab consumer attention and create brand awareness.
Anthropomorphic Food
Creating a friendly persona for food products to make them more relatable to consumers and increase their appeal.
Humor in Advertising
Using humor to create a more positive association with food products and create more memorable advertising campaigns.

Who This Affects Most

Food and Beverage
Opportunity to create innovative, attention-grabbing advertising campaigns and stand out in a crowded market.
Advertising
Opportunity to experiment with unconventional advertising methods and create provocative campaigns that drive consumer engagement.
Design
Opportunity to push boundaries in design and explore uncharted territory in food packaging and labeling.
SCORE
4.5 out of 10
GENDER
50% Men50% Women
MARKETTop markets: North America, Europe
GENERATION
  • Gen Z
  • Gen Alpha
  • Gen X
  • Millennial (primary audience)
POPULARITY
Popularity 83%
Activity 44%
Freshness 8%

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