A taste of democracy: South Korea’s 16-year fight for a green onion
breakfast cereal
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[July 20, 2020]
By Sangmi Cha and Josh Smith
SEOUL (Reuters) - It is being hailed as a
major win for democracy in South Korea. After 16 years in exile, a
president this week triumphantly returned to claim his rightful place -
on the front of a box of green onion-flavoured cereal.
The limited edition of the Chex cereal sold out within two days when it
hit online stores, following years of almost ceaseless campaigning by
enthusiasts.
The long road to the cereal aisle began in 2004 when Kellogg's Korea
launched a light-hearted marketing campaign for Chex, a five-grain
cereal, asking South Koreans to vote on a new flavour.
A TV commercial offered two cartoon candidates in the presidential
election for the Chex Choco Empire - chocolate-flavoured Cheki and green
onion-flavoured Chaka.
The PR stunt was meant to end in an easy victory for sweet Cheki. But
the people did not agree.
Votes for Chaka surged past those for Cheki, catching Kellogg's
unawares. Citing multiple votes by individuals, the company halted
online voting, threw out duplicate votes and declared Cheki the winner.
Chaka fans cried foul, and decried Cheki's subsequent 16-year rule as
that of an illegitimate tyrant. Chaka remained in the public
consciousness via regular hashtags like #PrayForChex, and memes
depicting the onion character as a freedom fighter.
"We never expected consumers would be interested in this product for
over 16 years," Kim Hee-yeon, a spokeswoman for Kellogg's Korea, told
Reuters. "Every time we launched new cereals or had promotional events,
online communities would repeatedly ask for the flavour."
Chaka's success was so momentous that on the day it was announced
earlier this month it surged past North Korea's bombing of an
inter-Korean liaison office to become the top trending topic on South
Korean social media.
"The cheating forces of Cheki were ousted and Mr. Chaka's 16-year
struggle has finally come to an end," one fan wrote on Twitter.
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A promotional image for Kellogg's spring onion flavoured cereal is
seen in this handout photo released to Reuters on June 30, 2020.
Mandatory credit KELLOGG KOREA/Handout via REUTERS
A TV advertisement apologised for the delay and featured a small
child whose dreams of onion cereal were crushed. Promotional
materials included a faux political poster with an image of Chaka
over former U.S. President Barack Obama's campaign slogan "yes we
can."
Limited edition cereals are usually on sale for about three months,
but that could be extended if sales are strong, Kim said. The
company had been working on developing the cereal for 15 years, but
had struggled to find the right onion flavour, she added. When it
called for 50 "early tasters" it received more than 14,200
applications.
Traditional Korean breakfasts are often savoury and even spicy, and
many people seemed to envision the onion flavour as a potential bar
snack with beer, rather than in a bowl with milk.
"I had adult-like taste in food since I was young, so I love local
food with garlic, green onion or kimchi," said food blogger Lee
Soo-jeong, 24, who voted for Chaka as a child and was an early
taster.
Her verdict on the long-awaited cereal?
"The green onion flavour is too mild."
(Reporting by Sangmi Cha and Josh Smith; editing by Jane Wardell)
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