Make sure you follow and tag and use the hashtags #ProudParent and #Giveaway. For your chance to get them, you have to participate in the #ProudParent campaign by going to Instagram or Twitter and sharing what allyship means to you. 9, Oreo will be giving away 10,000 packs of the limited-edition cookies to fans. Now to answer the question that is at the front of your mind: Where do I get them? You’ll need a little luck to get your hands on a pack, since they’re not sold in stores and are only available while supplies last. Oreo celebrated Gay Pride last year with a special limited edition rainbow Oreo: The first and largest organization for LGBTQ+ people, their parents and families, and allies. Disclaimer I do not own these photos, I have only changed the colors, if any of these photos belong to you and you would like credit, message me and I. They’re filled with red, orange, yellow, green, blue, purple, and pink cremes, so when you put them together, they’re the colors of the Pride flag. The post received more than 231,000 likes, and. The first-of-its-kind pack features chocolate cookies that are filled with seven different colored creme fillings. On Monday, a rainbow-stuffed Oreo cookie with the headline 'Proudly Support Love' was posted on Oreo's Facebook page in honor of Gay pride month. Of course, Oreo couldn’t miss the opportunity to release special cookies to further praise the cause! The collaboration has resulted in a new film, called Proud Parent, which ends with the line, “A loving world starts with a loving home.” It celebrates the important role of parental and community support for greater acceptance. Oreo has partnered with PFLAG National to build on the #ProudParent platform in honor of LGBTQ+ History Month, which is this October. You’ll want to put both of them to the side (for now!), because the eye-catching Oreo Rainbow Cookies deserve the floor. Oreo sparked an internet controversy by posting an image of a rainbow themed cookie on Facebook to support gay pride.
"Good luck eating your steak without A1 Steak Sauce, homophobes." As for the rest of us: Let's cross our fingers and hope Oreo will "make the rainbow cookie a reality.If you’re like us, you’ve been snacking on Nabisco’s Maple Creme cookies and even broke into the new Gingerbread flavor early. Nabisco, part of parent company Kraft, makes a lot more than cookies. Well, let the haters pursue their "shortsighted" boycott, says Neetzan Zimmerman at Gawker. A growing boycott threat might teach Oreo that companies can pay a steep price for taking stands on divisive issues. Judging from "the maelstrom of divided comments" from Oreo's 26 million Facebook followers, this could be bad for business. Not so fast, says Sheila Shayon at Brand Channel. By Tuesday afternoon over 170,000 Facebook users had liked the page and the post was inundated with thousands of pro- and anti-rainbow cookie statements. The image, which was praised by lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) rights advocates, was unveiled last weekend on Oreo's official Facebook page and quickly. The gay community may be small, but it is vocal and willing to rally "support for companies deemed to be on their side." You can bet it's rushing out to buy Nabisco's cookies. Kraft Foods set off a firestorm after posting a gay pride rainbow-filled OREO cookie on its Facebook page Monday with the caption Proudly support love. In a post titled ' Oreo - No Longer Favorite Cookie ,' members of One Million Moms are condemning a now-iconic image which showed the cookie filled with rainbow-colored creme. The reaction: It's pretty clear why Oreo is just one of a growing number of companies - JCPenney, for example - boldly embracing "gay pride as a business strategy," says Tiffany Hsu at the Los Angeles Times. 1 The image was accompanied by the captions 'June 25 Pride' and 'Proudly support love' in recognition of LGBT Pride Month in the United States. The pointedly flamboyant cookie, created soley as a P.R. On June 25th, 2012, a picture of an Oreo cookie with six layers of frosting in the colors of the rainbow flag was posted on Kraft Nabisco's Facebook page. (See the photo at right and below.) As of Wednesday morning, the post - which says, in part, "Proudly support love!" - had received some 220,000 likes and over 36,000 comments, both positive and negative. An ad featuring a gay pride-themed Oreo is stirring up viral controversy today after Kraft posted the rainbow-colored Oreo on the popular treat's Facebook page.
The image: Nabisco, the company behind Oreo cookies, has stirred up a Facebook debate after posting a photo of a radically reimagined Oreo in which the iconic white filling has been replaced with six rainbow-colored layers to support Gay Pride month.