Meet the Plush GMO Mascot, Frank N. Foode

Three years ago, CMD reported on Karden -- an adorable puppet used in part to convince kids that gardening with sewage sludge was a fun activity for all ages. (Karden, of course, failed to explain to the kiddos that sewage sludge extracted from city waste supplies can contain toxic and hazardous materials.)

Well, move over Karden the sludge puppet, there's a new toy in town! Frank N. Foode is "your friendly neighborhood genetically modified organism," who helps "make the science of biotechnology fun and approachable."

This ear of corn sprouted eyes, white hair, and spectacles. The "cutest corn plush" is the mascot of Biology Fortified, Inc., a new small non-profit group based in Middleton, Wisconsin that promotes genetically modified organisms (GMOs) and is responsible for the Biofortified blog.

"Few are able to resist getting their photo taken with" Frank, the group gushes -- including "the late Senator George McGovern, food writer Michael Pollan, Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack," and more.

But don't worry! Frank "does not endorse products, least of all genetically engineered food products," the group claims. Just GMOs and the science of GMOs in general!

Not content to be alone in his travels around the world, getting photographed with a random assortment of academics and luminaries, a recent fully-funded Kickstarter campaign now makes multiple plush "lovable Frank"s -- in other forms, branching out from GMO corn to GMO papaya and the opportunity to "adopt-a-crop" and pick a new GMO design (an opportunity not taken by anyone to date) -- available to his adoring fans (all 210 backers).

And hey, Frank even tweets!

Frankly, My Dear...

According to Biology Fortified, Inc.:

"The science behind genetically engineered foods is complicated, and often difficult for people to understand. Some people who think that these foods are strange, dangerous, or monstrous call them 'frankenfoods' rather than try to understand them. At the same time many other foods that we commonly eat are themselves very strange in their own right -- often even more strange than the changes made through genetic engineering. So we named our mascot Frank N. Foode™ to make light of it all! Our hope is that this fun character can help get people interested to learn and think about the issues surrounding plant genetics and agriculture, and give people a personality who they can follow around the world."

Jonathan Latham, co-founder and executive director of the Bioscience Resource Project and editor of Independent Science News, holds degrees in crop genetics and virology. He was a postdoctoral research associate in the Department of Genetics, University of Wisconsin, Madison -- where Biology Fortified co-founder, Karl Haro von Mogel, is a PhD candidate. But Latham is no fan of Biology Fortified's work. Latham told CMD, "They pose as pro-science but what they really offer is uncritical parroting of corporate talking points. They also deploy classic PR tactics. Whenever a real food safety issue occurs, or whenever a critical article about biotechnology is getting attention online, they try to derail legitimate discussion with red herrings."

While there are undoubtedly those who call GMOs "frankenfoods," many critics focus on the "pesticide treadmill" that the most commonly grown and sold GMOs -- "Roundup Ready" herbicide-resistant crops and those with the pesticide Bt built in -- perpetuate, as CMD has reported. This critique appears to have only been addressed in passing by the Biofortified blog, which simply notes that the issue of pesticide proliferation also "applies to non-breeding strategies including chemical insecticides and biological control agents," a point which critics of GMOs also make, as CMD has reported.

Other GMO critics are concerned about cross-contamination with non-GMO crops and weeds, creating herbicide-resistant weeds. But one of the Biofortified blog posts that addresses this concern calls "genetic contamination" an "emotional term" and not only completely ignores the issue of weeds becoming resistant to Roundup® glyphosate herbicide, but also ignores the contamination of food, such as the 2000 contamination of corn with GMO StarLink™ corn that led to a huge recall of Taco Bell taco shells. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) had registered the GMO corn variety for commercial use for livestock feed and industrial use only because it was judged to be "potentially allergenic ... in human food." Numerous other blogs on the site do discuss glyphosate.

Friends of Frank

Frank and friends have also produced a auto-tuning video of scientist Norman Borlaug, father of the "Green Revolution," an effort during the 1940s through the 1970s to increase world food production, particularly in poor countries such as Mexico, India, Pakistan, and the Philippines, through crop breeding and the increased use of fertilizer, pesticides, and irrigation. While the Green Revolution led to increased food production, many criticize it for creating social, economic, and environmental problems. The development and use of GMOs in food production has been called the "second green revolution."

Frank and his friends have some powerful fans. This video is being promoted on Twitter by CropLife International, a trade association containing all of the "Big 6" pesticide and GMO corporations -- Monsanto, BASF, Bayer, Dupont, Dow Chemical Company, and Syngenta -- some of the biggest companies in the world. CropLife America is an active member of the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) and its Energy, Environment, and Agriculture Task Force.

Frank is also a friend of Jon Entine, founding executive director of the Genetic Literacy Project and one of the GMO and pesticide industry's favorite PR tools. He wrote his 2011 Scared to Death: How Chemophobia Threatens Public Health for the American Council on Science and Health. ACSH requested $100,000 in funding for the book project from the GMO and pesticide corporation Syngenta as part of the company's PR campaign around its weed-killer atrazine, which was the subject of a major lawsuit, as CMD has reported. ACSH also receives regular operating support from Syngenta, which the email pitch called the organization's "lifeblood."

Frank's creator, Karl Haro von Mogel, recently met up with Entine in Puna, Hawai'i on their way to meet Dr. Dennis Gonsalves, the developer of GMO papayas. von Mogel wrote a gushing blog on his trip: "In Dennis, I had met the highest concentration of Aloha yet on the entire trip. If he were a plant, his leaves and roots exuded Aloha into the surrounding air and soil. It was infectious," before planting Frank in the papaya fields for a photo op. The two had presented together previously at a June 2013 GMO panel organized by the Cato Institute. And Entine has mentioned von Mogel in articles published in Forbes and elsewhere at least four times in recent months.

Entine's and von Mogel's primary organizations -- Genetic Literacy Project and Biology Fortified, Inc., respectively -- both claim not to accept corporate funding.

Too Early for April Fool's

The campaign to mass produce Frank the mascot is "so grotesque and over the top that it must be an April Fool's joke," says one campaigner for GMO testing and labeling. But the campaign is too early for April Fool's day, and may be too late to sway public opinion.

The American public has decided that, despite the platitudes of GMO promoters, eaters have the right to know when food contains GMOs (as an estimated 80 percent of the food supply in the United States does). The movement to require GMO labels in the United States -- as the European Union already does -- enjoyed support from 93 percent of respondents in a 2013 New York Times poll. So far in 2014, 67 GMO labeling bills have been introduced in 25 states, according to the National Conference of State Legislators. Additional bills are pending in California, Minnesota, Missouri, and Rhode Island; and campaigns in Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Hawaii, and Oregon work to put the question on the ballot for state voters.

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This article has been updated with four clarifications. First, the original version of this article suggested that some of the notable people photographed with the plush toy were "confused," although as the toy's creator, Karl Haro von Mogel, noted that individuals photographed knowingly posed with the toy even if they may not all endorse GMOs. Second, the article has been clarified to make clear that the discussion of a blog suggesting that cross-contamination was an "emotional term" but not mentioning high-profile instances of cross-contamination was referring only to "that" blog and not the blog site as a whole. Mr. Haro von Mogel has noted that numerous other blogs on his site discuss Roundup or weed resistance -- even though the older StarLink controversy is rarely mentioned.  He also notes that StarLink was not an issue of "genetic" contamination but involved GMO corn permitted for consumption by livestock being used impermissibly for human food. Third, the article has been clarified to make even clearer that Mr. Haro von Mogel's blog was gushing about his meeting with Dennis Gonsalves and not with Jon Entine. Finally, the article has been clarified to make clear that even though Norman Borlaug's words are often used to support GMOs, the video itself contains no reference to GMOs and contains only the controversial scientist's own words. We regret any confusion caused by the need to clarify these matters and apologize for any misunderstanding the original article may have caused. In addition, we have offered Mr. Haro von Mogel the opportunity to post a response to this article in the comments below.

 

Comments

Frank really needs a little "GMO" tee shirt so everyone can make an informed choice as to whether to buy him or not!

We would like to see CMD investigate how it is that the Bill and Melinda Gate's Foundation (supposedly a charity) pushes GMO crops in developing countries all the while Bill Gates and Warren Buffett are invested in Monsanto so as to profit from the spread of GMO crops. Perhaps puppets of Bill, Melinda and Warren could make even cuddlier mascots.

I would be very interested in seeing one piece of evidence that supports the tie between BFI and any corporate influence. I write for BFI because there is no corporate influence. None. CMD puts politics ahead of its mission. They should be lauding BFI for its independence. Instead they create spurious associations to create an essence of collusion where none exists. Anti GM cannot tolerate an independent source of reliable information that communicates and connects. Therefore, this smear piece on BFI and its creators.

This article looks slick and like it is legit and for the people but it's really just a copy of all the other attacks on anyone who thinks GMOs could be a good idea. It's the familiar "they must be a shill for the industry" if they could ever support the use of GMOs. I'm not going to go into a long rant here but I do want to point out that you mentioned that the Borlaug video was being promoted by all the major Ag companies. I don't follow your logic here, or see how that particular example shows that Biofortified is 'in cahoots' with them. The video was created. The companies posted it because they liked the message and furthermore, it is probably in agreement with their company mission statement. If an independent information website posted a video about a Nobel peace prize winning organic farmer, wouldn't it be acceptable for the major organic brands to feature it on their websites?

As t really turns out, Bt cron has no such allergic effects for humans. http://www.epa.gov/pesticides/biopesticides/pips/starlink_corn_monitoring.htm And Bt sweet corn is now on sale for direct human consumption. I, myself, had some and it was very good. So, not only is your writing alarmist by woefully outdated.

I am disappointed in the site. In the past I have used it as a reference for fair reporting. You imply connections, but lack any evidence to show that there any corporate ties. To me that says that the evidence is lacking. I have to ask you have done any investigation on some of the sites that are anti GMOs and their ties to the organic food industry. If you haven't you should. There you can find real links and ties, not imaginary ones.

As an organic farmer who has interacted extensively with Biofortified, and Anastasia Bodnar in particular, I find this attack paints an entirely inaccurate portrait of BFI, its co-founders, and its mascot. It's rare to find an on-line forum and individuals so dedicated to balanced, informed, intelligent, and respectful conversations on GMOs and related agricultural topics. You may not agree with their conclusions, or even their paradigm, but to question their intent or their integrity is completely out of line. I'd urge the author of this piece and any readers to spend some time on the Biofortified site, to interact with the co-founders and contributors, and to make up your own minds. My respect for PRWatch has been severely damaged by this post.

I am not an organic farmer or any kind of farmer but I completely agree with everything Rob says in the above comment. If ever two people cared about the correct information getting out to the public, Anastasia and Karl do. Frank is an attempt at better accessibility and approachability - no more, no less. This article comes across as a smear campaign. I think it's important to point out that just because someone, or an organization, or a non-profit informational website supports the use of GMOs does not make it or them a corporate shill. That is perhaps the worst myth spread by anti-GMO activists. Some people, myself included, just regular folks, support the technology because it has huge promise for an uncertain global food future. The advancement of the technology is being hampered by throngs of people who don't understand it and fear it. It is mob mentality.

It seems that a purpose of the mascot is to counter the fear based unscientific conclusions about GMOs that are spread by activists. The overwhelming scientific consensus is that GMO food products currently produced commercially present no more danger to human health than conventional crops. The NYT piece you link to says "Thirty-seven percent of those worried about G.M.O.’s said they feared that such foods cause cancer or allergies, although scientific studies continue to show that there is no added risk." This demonstrates that the public is ill/misinformed on the subject. Jonathan Latham's organizations (listed in the article) promote bad science and spread misinformation about GM food crops. People who are interested in the subject would do well to examine the evidence presented by the Biology Fortified and the Genetic Literacy Project websites. The fears expressed by the critics of GM technology are addressed with logic, reason, and credible, substantial evidence. As a liberal progressive who demands corporate and governmental accountability, I still am able to separate corporate behavior from the science. Yes, corporations stand to profit from GM food crops, and they stand to profit from pesticide and herbicide use. But all of these technologies need to be assessed scientifically (and they have). Attacking GMOs due to emotional attachment to anger about corporate evils is an incorrect path to the truth.

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