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New Pokémon Oreo Promotion Sparks Massive Backlash From Protestors

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Oreo manufacturer Mondelez International has announced an unexpected crossover with the Pokémon franchise this morning, which sees existing ‘Mons transformed into cookie form as part of an upcoming promotion.

There are 16 themed Oreo cookies to collect in specially marked cartons, including beloved starters like Pikachu and Piplup and even the legendary Mew. As many were quick to point out, the launch of the promotional cookies coincides with an ongoing union strike among workers that manufacture Oreos and other snacks at Nabisco-owned processing plants across the US.

2757-6132340ATTN: TRAINERS2757-613234016 @Pokemon X OREO Cookies are here… but some are harder to discover than others. Can you discover all 16? 1f60f-8069258 pic.twitter.com/c1NdowidHR

— OREO Cookie (@Oreo) September 8, 2021

Originating from the National Biscuit Company’s Chelsea, New York factory in 1912, Oreo is owned by Mondelez International. Mondelez is a multinational company based out of Chicago that formed in 2012 when Kraft Foods, the brand behind the iconic blue boxes of mac and cheese, divided itself into two separate companies: Kraft Foods Group (now a part of Kraft Heinz) and the confectionary focused Mondelez.

The cookies themselves are made by manufacturers around the world, and since 2018, Oreos sold in the US have been produced by Nabsico, a subsidiary of Mondelez. Since August 10, Nabisco employees have been on strike.

The Washington Post reported that workers’ grievances include suspended pensions, precarity from continued outsourcing, and long work hours — all in the face of soaring profits during the pandemic.

Union members have asked consumers for solidarity by targeting the manufacturer’s profits, calling on a boycott of Nabisco-made snacks, including Ritz Crackers, Chips Ahoy!, and Oreo cookies, but the artificial scarcity of the Pokemon-themed Oreos seem poised to pressure consumers to cross the picket line.

The all too apparent move to break the spirit of solidarity spurred many to amend the announcement with reminders of the ongoing strike.

Nabisco workers are striking right now, please don’t cross the picket line over Pokemon oreos https://t.co/sBZJ3nvY7C https://t.co/BNlXnplgZP

— Ty Galiz-Rowe (@owoathkeeper) September 8, 2021

Don’t fuckin buy the Pokémon Oreos. Nabisco workers are still on strike. Don’t cross the picket line just cause they did a tie-in product with your fandom.

— jn (they/them) is drawing corpses exquisitely (@JNButlerArt) September 8, 2021

Anyways nabisco employees are still striking. Dont be a scab for pokemon https://t.co/kfN2ESEy71

1f33f-6303557 Dandy 1f33f-6303557 (@Pudkip) September 8, 2021

I’d get these if I wasn’t boycotting nabisco for their treatment of their workers. Sorry Pokémon, I don’t cross the picket line even for y’all.

— ? Phantasm ? (@PhantasmicBones) September 8, 2021

Trainers should remember to support worker's rights and not purchase Nabisco products during the strike.

— Purim (@PurimPopoie) September 8, 2021

This isn’t the first time Oreo has been the target of union-backed boycotts. In 2015, labor activists responded to Mondelez’s plans to outsource production from Chicago to Mexico with calls for a boycott. While the company moved forward with 600 layoffs, production of the cookie continued in other US locations.

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