Compare the meerkat? That’s racist according to The Guardian

August 25, 2009 | Filed Under General, Media, UK Politics | 12 Comments

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@ByrneTofferings has tweeted to a link in The Guardian by Peter Jones which has really riled me. I’ll paste the entire article as it’s pretty short but will put in bold the hilariously pathetic parts:

A few weeks ago, my girlfriend and I were watching TV at home when the advert for comparethemarket.com appeared on our screen. I had seen the ad before and not thought anything of it. However on this occasion, my girlfriend, who is Ukrainian, turned to me and said: “I don’t like this advert, it is very offensive to me.” I mentioned it to a friend who said his Latvian lodger also found it offensive.

The advertisement centres on the word “market” – a word that eastern Europeans/Russians pronounce “meerkat” – using talking CGI-animated meerkats. The sole point of this African animal’s appearance is, it seems, to highlight the idea that east Europeans cannot pronounce the word market properly when they speak English. It struck me how racist it was to parody what is now a significant part of the British population in this way. It also occurred to me that were the ad to use stereotypical Indian or Caribbean accents in the same way it would never be allowed on TV (I think you’ll find there are a lot, none that spring to mind though).

Over the following week the ad seemed to be perpetually in our faces, the meerkat characters shouting “meerkats”, “meerkats” in their stereotypical tones into our living room. I decided to complain first to ITV. When I looked on the ITV website, to my shock, I found that their business development manager Richard Chilvers was boasting that this was his favourite ad and that it helped to bring his “passion alive”. I emailed my complaint. ITV responded that “the subject matter, content and treatment of all commercials are always given serious consideration to determine their suitability for transmission”. They also stated that “particular care is needed to ensure that advertisements are not misleading or offensive”. They then stated that I should contact the ASA (Advertising Standards Authority) which I duly did.

The ASA informed me that it did not assess advertisements before they went out but responded to complaints. The initial assessment and clearing was done by a company called Clearcast which, I was told, conveniently did not deal with the public. I then emailed my complaint to the ASA, whose response stated: “Whatever impact the mild stereotyping of the eastern European accent has is undercut by the fact that it is a cartoon rather than a live actor. As such we do not feel that the content of the commercial is likely to provoke widespread offence.” It said it had not had any other complaints.

I asked my girlfriend why that might be. She told me that people from eastern Europe were brought up in a society where it was not normal to complain, especially to such sectors as the government and the media. She told me that they would not expect to be able to do anything about it, they would not know of the existence of the ASA and the power to demand that an advert was taken off television. It is also the case that as so many people from eastern Europe were so new to the country that they would not want to be seen to be causing trouble. It then dawned on me that this ad was targeting a sector of the population who would be unlikely to fight back.

The irony of the situation is that those in charge at the ASA and ITV probably consider themselves the most politically correct in society. However, the evidence shows that they have only learned who not to offend, not how not to offend. It looks as though those from eastern Europe are going to have the same fight on their hands as people from India and the Caribbean did all those years ago.

Oh grow a fucking pair, you sad, pathetic little man. This has really riled me and it astounds me that people still buy The Guardian! What a load of nonsense. I’m sure Harriet Harman would be proud – trying to find offence in everything that’s a joke. I bet he wouldn’t have any complaints if the advert wasn’t so widespread and on loads.

It’s not targeting a group that won’t fight back, it’s not being derogatory at all. They wanted to play on the market/meerkat soundalike and decided that the Eastern European accent was the closest to fit this. Stop being such a moron that gets an orgasm every time they find something they can claim to be offended at.

It’s people like this that make me want to move to a country that doesn’t care as much. Thank God Labour will be gone at the next election, I can’t be doing with any more of the PC, left wingery!

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Compare the meerkat? That’s racist according to The Guardian
Article written by Cardiff Blogger

Comments

12 Responses to “Compare the meerkat? That’s racist according to The Guardian”

  1. Arrrgh. As i have blogged on my other blog, the problem is “wet fucking drippy thin-skinned liberals whose life purpose it is to seek out offence”!
    http://vindicovindico.blogspot.com/2009/08/meerkats-racism.html

  2. haha I’m keeping that quote in my book.

  3. Anon

    Have you seen the GoCompare commercial which uses a big fat Italian tenor touting a silly mustache?

    Why are search comparison websites all so racist?

    I’m going to scream until everybody stops laughing.

  4. And that Dolmio advert! How racist!

  5. Anon2

    Calm down. Quite a few people now believe this article to be a spoof – possibly some viral marketing by CompareTheMarket’s ad agency.

    Seems to have worked, too, if you’ve got your blog visitors to read it.

  6. Graham

    Assuming this guy was for real, I actually felt sorry for the *mauling* he got on Guardian CiF. It was blow, after blow, after blow. At first it was great, but then it was like smashing the last bits of blood and brains out of a long since lifeless corpse. Shit article, but the kicking he was harsh!

  7. He probably wanted the attention. It’s a bit like the attack on Gordon Brown. They’re holding out long enough for people to start feeling sorry for him.

  8. Paul

    Geordies pronounce it Meerkat too, in fact it would be a better advert if the meerkats were geordie’s.

  9. BERNARD EDGE

    how stupid of some people.I all ways enjoyed the advert,but now it is just silly,not racist or antthing like that.

  10. rose

    everybody is making such a fuss over a little marketing campaign. I’m surprised it even worked…I found this good article about the Russian meerkat over here: onthebutton.wordpress.com/2009/08/28/compare-the-meerkat/

  11. Most of the comments left by Guardian Online readers are (rightly) scornful as well. Why he was given a column in the Guardian I don’t understand. Appears to be the first article he’s written as well.

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