POPULARITY
pWotD Episode 2813: Aunt Jemima Welcome to Popular Wiki of the Day, spotlighting Wikipedia's most visited pages, giving you a peek into what the world is curious about today.With 295,492 views on Monday, 13 January 2025 our article of the day is Aunt Jemima.Aunt Jemima was an American breakfast brand for pancake mix, table syrup, and other breakfast food products. The original version of the pancake mix was developed in 1888–1889 by the Pearl Milling Company and was advertised as the first "ready-mix" cooking product.Aunt Jemima was modeled after, and has been a famous example of, the "Mammy" archetype in the Southern United States. Due to the "Mammy" stereotype's historical ties to the Jim Crow era, Quaker Oats announced in June 2020 that the Aunt Jemima brand would be discontinued "to make progress toward racial equality", leading to the Aunt Jemima image being removed by the fourth quarter of 2020.In June 2021, amidst heightened racial unrest in the United States, the Aunt Jemima brand name was discontinued by its current owner, PepsiCo, with all products rebranded to Pearl Milling Company, the name of the company that produced the original pancake mix product. The Aunt Jemima name remains in use in the brand's tagline, "Same great taste as Aunt Jemima."Nancy Green portrayed the Aunt Jemima character at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago and was one of the first Black corporate models in the United States. Subsequent advertising agencies hired dozens of actresses to perform the role as the first organized sales promotion campaign.This recording reflects the Wikipedia text as of 02:00 UTC on Tuesday, 14 January 2025.For the full current version of the article, see Aunt Jemima on Wikipedia.This podcast uses content from Wikipedia under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.Visit our archives at wikioftheday.com and subscribe to stay updated on new episodes.Follow us on Mastodon at @wikioftheday@masto.ai.Also check out Curmudgeon's Corner, a current events podcast.Until next time, I'm generative Kajal.
Is YAML a programming language? According to Robbie and Chuck, it's not. And even though you could code in YAML and add functions to it, doesn't mean you should. Some things are better left uncomplicated. YAML is a data structuring format, and that's what it's good at. While some might disagree, Chuck and Robbie believe functions are one of the key elements of programming languages and YAML doesn't have that baked in. If you're looking for functions, it's better to stick to a programming language that has what you need. In this episode, Chuck and Robbie talk about holiday trivia, the history behind Pearl Milling Company's rebrand, and the pros and cons of coding in YAML. Key Takeaways [01:11] - Number 15 Whiskey - Blackened Flagship. [04:47] - Number 16 Whiskey - Amrut Indian Single Malt Whiskey. [08:27] - The story of the Pearl Milling Company. [13:07] - Holiday Trivia. [17:40] - Best use case for YAML. Quotes [18:45] - “You think of CSV as a data structuring format, I think of JSON as a more data structuring format, and I think of YAML as an even more robust, diverse data structure format.” ~ Chuck Carpenter [20:07] - “Programming languages are good at executing things, and I would think that YAML is not a programming language in the classic sense.” ~ Robbie Wagner Links Blackened Flagship Whiskey Metallica Amrut Indian Single Malt Whiskey The Pearl Milling Company Ben's Original Rice Costco YAML NPM Connect with our hosts Robbie Wagner Chuck Carpenter Ship Shape Subscribe and stay in touch Apple Podcasts Spotify Google Podcasts Whiskey Web and Whatnot Top-Tier, Full-Stack Software Consultants This show is brought to you by Ship Shape. Ship Shape's software consultants solve complex software and app development problems with top-tier coding expertise, superior service, and speed. In a sea of choices, our senior-level development crew rises above the rest by delivering the best solutions for fintech, cybersecurity, and other fast-growing industries. Check us out at shipshape.io.
On today's MJ Morning Show: Fester's pants Q105's air conditioning Morons in the news Dog and cat stories What's the worst thing you might find in the basement of your new home? A robber was caught because of the DNA on a can of Red Bull Missy is complaining again MJ's neighbor's porch pirate MJ will be on his way to finally get his windshield replaced What did MJ think might cause a fire in his neighborhood Would you put mayonaise in your egg nog? Pearl Milling Company added something to their commercials MJ's smashed phone Kirstie Alley MJ's UBreakIFix phone repair experience Mindy Kaling on 'The Office' Guns N' Roses lawsuits Simon Cowell... what did he do to his face?
The first pancake mix in a box was made by Pearl Milling Company, but soon other companies would follow such as Pillsbury and General Mills, which came out with the multipurpose Bisquick in 1931.
Watch the 9malls review of the Pearl Milling Company Pancake On The Go Chocolate Chip Microwave Cup. Are these pancake cups really light and fluffy? Watch the hands on test to find out. #pancake #review #breakfast #microwave Find As Seen On TV Products & Gadgets at the 9malls Store: https://www.amazon.com/shop/9malls Please support us on Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/9malls Disclaimer: I may also receive compensation if a visitor clicks through to 9malls, or makes a purchase through Amazon or any affiliate link. I test each product on site thoroughly and give high marks to only the best. We are independently owned and the opinions expressed here are our own.
Watch the 9malls review of the Pearl Milling Company Pancake On The Go Buttermilk And Maple Microwave Cup. Is this just add water microwave pancake snack cup actually worth getting? Watch the hands on test to find out. #pancake #review #pearlmilling #breakfast #snacks Find As Seen On TV Products & Gadgets at the 9malls Store: https://www.amazon.com/shop/9malls Please support us on Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/9malls Disclaimer: I may also receive compensation if a visitor clicks through to 9malls, or makes a purchase through Amazon or any affiliate link. I test each product on site thoroughly and give high marks to only the best. We are independently owned and the opinions expressed here are our own.
The Brothers are going deep this week. We open talking about the border, horses, and whips. And Buckhead is thinking about succeeding from ATL. These too are because of slavery. Byron shows off his employee of the month plaque, and Razi fills everyone in on the current lawsuits Marvel has against their artists to keep rights to characters like Iron Man, Black Panther, and more. Ferg explains why we should care about the Wonder Years remake. We react to Pearl Milling Company solving the black plight by killing off Aunt Jemima. We jump into the questions with Razi asking, "Do you celebrate perfect attendance for your kids and how do you decide when to let them stay out?" Tab is not feeling the Titans' Starfire race bend. So Byron wants our thoughts on should we be cool with black actors taking on traditional white characters or should we press for black characters to shine. Ferg takes last question and wants to know, "do soulmates exist." Don't forget to check out the youttube channel for even more content. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/threebrothersnosense/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/threebrothersnosense/support
This week on The Op-Ed Page with Elisa Camahort Page: Available anywhere you listen to podcasts, so please share, subscribe, rate and review!! 1. When activism goes wrong My book, Road Map for Revolutionaries: Resistance, Activism, and Advocacy for all: https://elisacp.com/books An activist reality TV show, and the backlash against it: https://www.gq.com/story/the-activist-cbs-usher-priyanka-chopra-julianne-hough-backlash Julianne Hough responds to backlash: https://deadline.com/2021/09/julianne-hough-the-activist-backlash-response-1234833997/ Alison Turkos, activist: https://www.alisonturkos.com/ Winner Takes All by Anand Giridharadas: https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/539747/winners-take-all-by-anand-giridharadas/ My 2021 work with Pearl Milling Company: https://www.instagram.com/tv/CTpYTT8JYer/ 2. The new GOP strategy: Distract Turnout and results: https://www.nytimes.com/live/2021/09/14/us/california-recall-election-newsom https://www.sacbee.com/news/politics-government/capitol-alert/article254416193.html 3. Quick takes: What if we don't actually care about “the children?”: Last week's newsletter on what the data tells us about how much we as a society care about the welfare of children. Also, links to my 09/11 remembrances. https://elisacp.substack.com/p/what-if-we-actually-dont-care-about The books/TV/movies mentioned: Come From Away on Apple TV+ The Morning Show on Apple TV+ LulaRich on Hulu Leonard and Hungry Paul by Ronan Hession Where to find me: My website: https://elisacp.com Sign up for my new newsletter, This Week-ish with Elisa Camahort Page: https://elisacp.substack.com New Calendly: schedule a session with me!: https://calendly.com/elisacp Thanks to Ryan Cristopher for my podcast music: https://music.apple.com/us/artist/ryan-cristopher/1479898729 Road Map for Revolutionaries by me, Carolyn Gerin and Jamia Wilson: https://roadmapforrevolutionaries.com Social media handles: Twitter: @ElisaC @OpEdPagePodcast Insta: @ElisaCP TikTok: @ElisaCP Please share, subscribe, rate and review!
It's the final day of August 2021...where did THAT summer go? Coming up, right after the news headlines you'll meet shooting instructor Amanda Robinson and her story about guns, gun rights, safety, gear and more. But first: The Pearl Milling Company and branding; Home prices rise yet again; But it's worse in Canada; Microsoft coming out with Windows 11; Supply Chain, COVID19 and Dollar Tree; The Wall Street Report; Getting a tech job with...a little help. Those stories plus my conversation with Amanda Robinson and her journey from attorney to firearms instructor for Crossroads Shooting Sports and how she works with women to help them better understand the world of gun ownership and the responsibilities that come with it. To hear that conversation, click here. Thanks for listening. The award winning Insight on Business the News Hour with Michael Libbie is the only weekday business news podcast in the Midwest. The national, regional and some local business news along with long-form business interviews can be heard Monday - Friday. You can subscribe on PlayerFM, Podbean, iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher or TuneIn Radio. And you can catch The Business News Hour Week in Review each Sunday Noon on News/Talk 1540 KXEL. The Business News Hour is a production of Insight Advertising, Marketing & Communications. You can follow us on Twitter @IoB_NewsHour.
Dr. Fauci has flipped flopped so many times that he has officially lost all of his credibility. Australia enforces another lockdown, and the military has begun arresting people. New video footage has surfaced which shows the capitol police possibly instigating the riot on January 6. Who's paying for the covid tests? And how are we testing for the different variants? Governor Andrew Cuomo encourages businesses to require vaccinations. A new study claims that men are bigger polluters than women. Many people switch back from electric vehicles to gas powered due to the inconvenience of charging them. Jogging is now racist! Pearl Milling Company is still labeled Aunt Jemima in some stores. Universities are now requesting that white people not apply to the schools. White people should give their spots to non-white students. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
You may have noticed that several familiar and well-established national brands are either changing their names or changing their appearances. Much of the changes deal with removing brands or images that were perceived as racial stereotypes. Perhaps one of the most publicized and anticipated name changes was the Aunt Jemima brand of pancake mix, syrup, and other breakfast foods. The brand originated in the 1890s, featuring the first self-rising pancake mix. PepsiCo, the owner of the Aunt Jemima brand, changed the name to Pearl Milling Company and removed the image of the Black woman known as Aunt Jemima. The new...Article Link
This podcast was recorded on February 23, 2021Sydney tells the team about a new chocolate milk called Slate, which was designed for adults, in Episode 2 of the Xtalks Food Podcast. Tune into this episode to hear a clip from Sydney's interview with Manny Lubin, one of the co-founders of Slate, who shares why chocolate milk was in need of a rebrand. In this episode, Mira also discusses Aunt Jemima's rebranding to Pearl Milling company in an effort to eliminate the company's role in perpetuating racial stereotypes. The podcasters debate whether this move is enough of a response from the brand in the context of the Black Lives Matter movement and racial inequality in North America.Read the full articles here:Slate Chocolate Milk: The Better-for-You, Canned Dairy Beverage Designed for AdultsAunt Jemima Rebranding to Pearl Milling Company to Eliminate Racial StereotypesFor more food and beverage industry content, visit the Xtalks Vitals homepage.Follow Us on Social MediaTwitter: @XtalksFoodInstagram: @XtalksFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/Xtalks.Webinars/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/xtalks-webconferencesYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/XtalksWebinars/featured
2020 changed the world in many ways, including a renewed push for racial justice and equality in the United States. That demand must now be echoed in how companies brand and market their products. With increased calls for racial justice, Kirstyn Nimmo saw how she could bring her marketing expertise and experiences as a Black woman to help brands act authentically and impact racial equality. Nimmo founded Good Worx and consults numerous big brands on social causes. Branding in the era of racial justice brings unique challenges, but also new opportunities to connect with customers and make meaningful changes. A recent example of the need for inclusive branding comes from Aunt Jemima. The company, which is owned by Quaker Oats and PepsiCo, has received complaints for years about its branding and inclusion of a racist stereotype on its packaging. Those complaints grew in 2020 to calls for Aunt Jemima to change its name. Quaker Oats and PepsiCo responded by essentially erasing the history and changing the name to the Pearl Milling Company. Instead of engaging in a conversation with its customers and members of the Black community, it appears the company erased any reference to Black culture from its product. Nimmo acknowledges that this is a complex issue, but also says that PepsiCo missed the mark. Although there was complicated history around Aunt Jemima, it was also Black representation on a popular product, which is important. Rather than engaging in conversations with the Black community to understand the history and its significance, many companies take the easy route to delete issues. PepsiCo had the opportunity to evolve into a new brand identity that could have highlighted the Black community and its roots instead of just covering it up. People don't want to feel uncomfortable, but in this era of racial justice, those uncomfortable conversations need to happen. Nimmo has three tips for branding in the era of racial justice: Be open to feedback from consumers. Brands need to create channels for feedback and listen to what customers have to say. Use the feedback as a way to connect with people on a deeper level and learn from their experiences. Take accountability for what is being called out. Too many brands only change once they face extreme public pressure. Brands need to be brave and acknowledge their past and see how they can change. Instead of ignoring the problem or trying to erase it, brands need to be accountable for their past actions. Reverse the harm. Brands should do whatever is needed to realize how their actions have harmed people. Nimmo says brands need to reverse the harm by swinging the pendulum the other way to create equity and equality. This new era of racial justice is more than a passing phase—it is a lasting push for equality. Brands need to realize the importance of the current issues and listen to their customers from all backgrounds to successfully lead representation and change. Links to further resources mentioned in the show: How the Aunt Jemima Rebrand Missed the Mark Kirstyn Nimmo's article Uncle Ben - Saturday Night Live skit Aunt Jemima CANCELLED, Replaced With "Pearl Milling Company" with Anthony Brian Logan Blake Morgan is a customer experience futurist, keynote speaker, and author of the bestselling book The Customer Of The Future. Sign up for her new course here. For regular updates on customer experience, sign up for her weekly newsletter here.
* Miami plans to cover rent / utilities for struggling tenants. Will the significant anti “handout” Miami populace be hypocritical and accept? * What is socialism actually? * An article in the Atlantic has a scathing account of Senator Marco Rubio. * Former Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is the embodiment of hypocrisy. * Senator Chuck Grassley's objection to President Biden ending the 1776 commission and its whitewashing / re-writing of American history. * Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene and her interesting beliefs including a space laser that is causing California's forest fires. * American flight attendant falsely claims to have been kidnapped in Jamaica in order to try and circumvent Covid-19 quarantine requirements. * Weaponizing the act of calling police as an attack on black people. * California prosecutors' disgusting measure of frequently charging people with felonies in order to not affect their respective counties' budgets. * Tyquine Lee's horrific solitary comfinement of more than 600 days from 2016 to 2018. * Aunt Jemima syrup is now Pearl Milling Company. Why and what's in the “syrup?” #JusticeOverOrder #BeBetter
On this special episode, we discuss the effects of the vaccine on Greg, a man takes out an ad about his slow internet service, Neuralink chips, Trans rights in sports, Pearl Milling Company, Gay Burgers, and Greg does a ftmf. Join us for the laughs! Aaron Epstein, 90, spent $10,000 to run a newspaper ad about his slow AT&T Internet - The Washington Post Elon Musk's brain chip could save this woman's life - TESLARATI Mississippi bans young transgender athletes from competing on female sports teams (msn.com) Aunt Jemima Has a New Name: The Pearl Milling Company - The New York Times (nytimes.com) Make Lunch Gay Again With This New 'Gay Burger' Restaurant (pride.com) The Hypocritical Canceling of Gina Carano by Michael Brown (townhall.com)
This week, The Business Communicators tackle the biggest headlines in the PR, branding and digital media world. The show begins by analyzing the downfall of The Lincoln Project, and Aunt Jemima's rebranding, finally retiring the racist stereotype that has adorned its label for decades. Then, Austin, Hattie and Thomas weigh in on why Instagram banned Robert Kennedy Jr. from the platform, and the emergence of Clubhouse, the upstart $1 billion social media platform taking the world by storm.First up, The Lincoln Project, a political Super PAC which raised more than $90 million ahead of the 2020 election, is under fire after co-founder John Weaver is alleged to have sexually harassed more than 20 men. What did the organization know and when? To make matters worse, it's speculated that the organization hacked co-founder Jennifer Horn's Twitter account last week after she stepped down from her role due to Weaver's "grotesque and inappropriate behavior." Can the organization be trusted moving forward, or are these communications and ethical failures the beginning of the end for the Super PAC?Then, although reinventing the company was a long-time coming, will the new look and image of the Pearl Milling Company resonate with consumers that are used to the previous image and name that sustained Aunt Jemima for over 100 years; or once the new packaging is on retail shelves will customers say “yum” or “yuk”, and will it mean that the Pearl Milling Company might get flattened by the competition? Next up, the Kennedy name is powerful, and it is also synonymous with controversy. Instagram has shut down Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s account for spreading misinformation about COVID-19 vaccines. With more than 800,000 followers on Kennedy's account, Facebook, which owns Instagram, announced that it would flag or remove posts from users and groups that spread misinformation about vaccines. Spreading misinformation on social media is dangerous. Full stop. However, can are digital media companies taking censorship too far, and is their business model sustainable with a lack of moderation?Closing out the show, if you are a social media enthusiast like us, you're likely well-aware of Clubhouse, the invite-only social audio app, where everyone wants to be part of the club. Founded in March 2020 by Paul Davison and Rohan Seth, Clubhouse boasts more than six million weekly users and boasts a value of over $1 billion. Buoyed currently by a host of A-list celebrities including Elon Musk and Oprah Winfrey, Clubhouse's exclusivity, candid conversations, and the opportunity to share the stage is what currently makes it so alluring. Although Davison and Seth say Clubhouse was created for everyone, can the app maintain its appeal to user once it's open to all?Music Credit: Smoke (with Lostboycrow) -- FeatherConnect with The Business Communicators on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube and LinkedIn, and find out more about our show at TheBusinessCommunicators.com. And, if you haven't done so already, be sure to subscribe to our podcast on iTunes and leave us a five-star review. Questions or comments? Send us an email to podcast@iabchouston.com or text “podcast” to (713) 360-0133.IABC Houston SponsorsDiamond Partner: Pierpont CommunicationsChapter Partner: Mykrantz & Co
Not Your Marketer: News about Marketing, Business and Marketing
Today I talked about Coca-Cola rethinking its marketing strategy; Aunt Jemina doing a brand change, TikTok's sale to Oracle-Walmart is on hold, Core Web Vitals, and Google's latest algorithm update (passages), and Microsoft's xCloud. 1️⃣ HEADLINES: Coke is thinking about doing always-on-data-driven marketing campaigns focused on experiential marketing to improve its profitability. Sources: MarketingDive, MarketingWeek Aunt Jemina's out, say hello to Pearl Milling Company. Sources: MarketingDive TikTok deal with Oracle+Walmart is on hold. Sources: AdExchanger Auditing your Core Web Vitals and the passage update from Google's algorithm. Sources: Search Engine Land(1), Search Engine Land(2) Microsoft's xCloud, cloud gaming alternative will be available on web browsers, Safari included. Sources: The Verge
********************************************************************************************************************************************************************* Let's talk about some things that are changing, or being canceled, depending on who you are asking; Syrup, Breastfeeding, and the National Anthem among those things. ********************************************************************************************************************************************************************* Breastfeeding is now 'human feeding' or 'chestfeeding'. Aunt Jemima is now Pearl Milling Company. and Dallas Mavericks Owner, Mark Cuban says no longer plays the National Anthem at games. Please Subscribe, Click Here ( https://www.youtube.com/jthshow?sub_confirmation=1 ). ✵✵✵Find Me Everywhere✵✵✵ https://linktr.ee/jthshow -- 00:00 - Intro 02:10 - No More Breastfeeding 13:18 - No More ‘Aunt Jemima' 13:45 - No More National Anthem -- #JTHshow ( https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/jthshow ) #News ( https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/news ) #Breastfeeding ( https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/breastfeeding ) Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/jthshow/donations
Quaker Oats is releasing a new name and logo for its "Aunt Jemima" products, finally retiring the racist stereotype that has adorned its pancake mixes and syrups for decades. The name "Aunt Jemima," long criticized as a racist caricature of a Black woman stemming from slavery, will be replaced with the Pearl Milling Company name and logo on the former brand's new packaging, according to parent company PepsiCo. More at www.CooperandAnthony.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/cooperandanthony/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/cooperandanthony/support
Hi everybody! We missed you. In this episode, The friggen Super Bowl We still say F' Tom Brady! Elon Musk is the richest human, Pizza Americana, A little existentialism, What's up with Republicans these days, The Pearl Milling Company, Black Holes, Did you get your vaccine? Big Trouble in Sex and the City, Mayor Yang and more. Catch the excitement! It's our 28th episode... --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/omos/support
3:23:53 – Frank in New Jersey, plus the Other Side. Topics include: Cat food, lotion, and coffee, the deep freeze, pasta counting, supermarket, bag collecting in the future, Palmer’s Coconut Oil Hand Cream, The Body Shop, Nona Lim Green Curry Noodle Bowl, Pearl Milling Company, early Macintosh gaming, Eric’s Cascade and Mumplypeg, The Secret History of […]
Quaker Oats is releasing a new name and logo for its "Aunt Jemima" products, finally retiring the racist stereotype that has adorned its pancake mixes and syrups for decades. The name "Aunt Jemima," long criticized as a racist caricature of a Black woman stemming from slavery, will be replaced with the Pearl Milling Company name and logo on the former brand's new packaging, according to parent company PepsiCo. More at www.CooperandAnthony.com
Maverick's owner Mark Cuban reverses course on not playing the national anthem before games. Trump's second impeachment trial. Will he be convicted? The internet wants a pound of flesh for the people who made Britney Spears life difficult at the turn of the century Real or Fake? Super Bowl Streaker bet 50k on himself. I went full Karen in Costco Aunt Jemima Syrup changing it's name to Pearl Milling Company. I still don't want it. Remembering LinsanityListen to George on the Nightcap on Mad Dog Sports Radio Sirius 82 and Fox Sports Radio Sunday's 2-5p PT. Ralph and George on Pac-12 Apostles podcast Wrighster or Wrong portion of the George Wrighster Podcast with Ralph Amsden is the intersection where sports, business, society, and pop culture meet. Daily Fire… FACTS ONLY… Check Your feelings at the door.. No BS. Keep it 100. Subscribe to my Youtube Channel to watch the video version of the podcast, and Follow me on Twitter. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/george-wrighster-or-wrong/message Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
(Intro) Facebook swingers post. (Topic) What's the best Valentine's Day gift? - Wrong answers only! (Dirty) Britney Spears post a message on IG amid debate about her personal life thanks to the NYT "Framing Britney" documentary. Kim Kardashian shares North West's painting. Claudia Conway on American Idol. Judas And The Black Messiah track listing features Jay-Z and Nipsey collaboration. (5TYNTK) Opening arguments set for Trumps 2nd impeachment trial. Canada extends Cruise ship ban until February 2022. Aunt Jemima will be rebranded as Pearl Milling Company. Stephen King funds Lewiston elementary school students manuscript. (Outro) G League names Red Claws' Dajuan Eubanks as executive of the year.
Feb 10, 2021 - Daily News and ComedySupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/theoneminutenews)