In the annals of ill-conceived public relations campaigns, the egg industry's war on Just Mayo deserves at least a mention.
Just Mayo is a product that looks like mayonnaise, tastes like mayonnaise and yet contains no eggs. The company behind it, Hampton Creek, has been getting lots of attention.
Josh Tetrick, the company's founder, has big ambitions. "If we're successful, there are a lot of [food] industries out there that are going to have to adjust," says Tetrick.
That kind of attitude apparently provoked agitation at the headquarters of the American Egg Board. Two years ago, the board's president, Joanne Ivy, sent an email to her organization's public relations consultants at Edelman. "It would be a good idea if Edelman looked at this product as a crisis and major threat to the future of the egg product business," she wrote. She wanted something done about it.
In later emails, officials at the American Egg Board talked about how the name Just Mayo was misleading the public. They discussed alerting the Food and Drug Administration to this fact. They asked another consultant to call Whole Foods, to try to persuade the supermarket to drop Just Mayo. There was even a joke about putting a gangster-style hit on Hampton Creek's CEO, which was a bit of a shock for Tetrick when he eventually saw the emails.
"I'm sure that was joking, but nonetheless, that was unexpected, to see this entity talking about putting a hit out on me," he says.
The emails all came to light because the American Egg Board is technically part of the government. It's funded by the egg industry, but it's run by the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
This means that it is covered by the Freedom of Information Act, and Ryan Shapiro, a FOIA expert at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Shapiro's Washington, D.C.-based FOIA-specialist attorney, Jeffrey Light, used the law to get all these documents. Shapiro sent them to Hampton Creek, which released them to journalists. The documents led to a wave of stories calling the campaign a government conspiracy to bring down Just Mayo. It's hard to imagine better publicity for the product that the egg board was trying to fight.
The emails seemed particularly provocative because the American Egg Board appeared to be violating the spirit of special rules that govern such government-industry partnerships. (There's a whole family of such organizations, including the National Pork Board and the United Soybean Board.)
"The egg board is supposed to promote eggs. It's not supposed to take down competitors," says Michele Simon, a frequent critic of the food industry who runs a consulting business called Eat, Drink, Politics.
The egg board also is not supposed to try to influence government regulators like the FDA, she says, "and yet these emails reveal discussions around how to make a complaint to FDA and who should make a complaint."
Ivy, the egg board's president, wrote in a statement that the board never did, in the end, contact the FDA, and that "we remain extremely confident that AEB has not broken any laws." Its efforts, she wrote, were simply intended to "educate consumers about the benefits of eggs, especially as they are faced with new egg replacement options."
As it happens, the FDA did send Hampton Creek a warning letter a few weeks ago, informing the company that its products violate FDA rules. "The use of the term 'Just' together with 'Mayo' reinforces the impression that the products are real mayonnaise," the FDA wrote. According to the FDA, real mayonnaise legally has to contain eggs.
Transcript
RACHEL MARTIN, HOST:
Coke versus Pepsi, McDonald's versus Burger King, Bud versus Miller - now details about another fierce commercial rivalry - a campaign by the American Egg Board to fight a product that calls itself mayo but does not contain any eggs. As NPR's Dan Charles reports, the Egg Board's behavior may land it in some legal trouble.
DAN CHARLES, BYLINE: There's a product that looks like mayonnaise and calls itself Just Mayo, but it's vegetarian. And the company behind it, Hampton Creek, has big ambitions. Joshua Tetrick is the company's founder.
JOSHUA TETRICK: If we're successful, there are a lot of industries out there that are going to have to adjust.
CHARLES: Like the egg industry, maybe. But eggs are not going down without a fight. Two years ago, the president of the American Egg Board sent an email to a public relations consultant calling the Just Mayo product a crisis and major threat. She wanted something done about it.
In later e-mails, they talked about the name, Just Mayo, how it was misleading the public, they said. Someone should alert the Food and Drug Administration. They asked another consultant to call Whole Foods to convince the supermarket to drop Just Mayo. There was even a joke about putting a gangster-style hit on Hampton Creek's CEO, which was a bit of a shock for Joshua Tetrick when he eventually saw the emails.
TETRICK: I'm sure that was joking, but nonetheless, it was somewhat unexpected to see this entity talking about putting a hit out on me.
CHARLES: The emails all came to light because the American Egg Board is technically part of the government. It's funded by the egg industry, but it's run by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. So the Egg Board is covered by the Freedom of Information Act. And an independent activist used the law to get all these documents and sent them to Hampton Creek. This is more than just a commercial spat. Because the egg board is part of the government, there are special rules about what it's allowed to do.
MICHELE SIMON: The Egg Board is supposed to promote eggs. It's not supposed to take down competitors.
CHARLES: Michele Simon is a frequent critic of the food industry. She runs a consulting business called Eat Drink Politics. The Egg Board also is not supposed to influence government regulators, she says.
SIMON: And yet, these emails reveal discussions around how to make a complaint to FDA, who should make the complaint.
CHARLES: Joann Ivy, the Egg Board's president, released a statement saying that the egg board never did, in the end, contact the FDA. The board is confident it did not break the law, she said. She said its efforts were intended to educate consumers about the benefits of eggs in the face of new egg replacement options. Dan Charles, NPR News. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.
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