If you’ve
watched any of the BBC this week you can’t have failed to have noticed the
advert featuring a sprout. Sprout Boy as he is known is the Corporation’s
unusual choice for their festive mascot this year and features in an animated
trail for the season. In a Christmassy
mess (a Christmess?) our green hero can’t get anyone interested in him until he
stumbles upon a house where all the BBC’s stars live together- I always knew
this happened- and is accepted and made welcome. He’s happy, we’re all happy.
However one word of caution- surely Sprout Boy is destined for the Christmas
table along with other veg and potatoes? He may be celebrating prematurely! I
bet an hour earlier the BBC house welcomed Sally Stuffing and now she’s warming
in the kitchen!
"The campaign shines a light on BBC1 bringing the
nation together in their millions through its line up of Christmas schedule
programming, characters and talent," says the BBC optimistically. The advert was made by Rainey Kelly Campbell Roalfe/Y&R and directed by Alan Smith and Adam Foulkes with the music recorded at Abbey
Road Studios. It’s actually been made in 3D for the 8 people who have a 3D set
and features animated caricatures of the BBC’s biggest stars.
It is quite
a refreshing change to the traditional yet it also embraces those things with
which we’re all familiar this time of year. The decision to use a sprout as the
icon is a bold one as this is one aspect of the Christmas dinner that seems to divide people; some like
them a lot, others loathe them. Few think sprouts are just OK.
Discussing the
concept of Sprout Boy co-director Adam Foulkes has said he is “like a little
naïve schoolboy, an eternal optimist. He can’t help but skip everywhere. For
some reason it felt right that he would wear little hobnail boots.” Deciding on
a sprout was not without careful consideration though as Alan Smith explains: “A
sprout is a great vegetable to bring to life but we had to be careful with
scale when he stands next to humans. Obviously we had to be able to see him but
if we made him too big there was a danger of cabbage confusion. And nobody
wants that.” How right he is, one of the biggest problems in modern life is
cabbage confusion. By some bizarre coincidence or excellent lobbying from
sprouts themselves, Sky has also included sprouts in their festive promotions.
Of course
generations grew up thinking sprouts were actually a squelchy mass of soggy
green stuff that tasted of nothing because schools used to serve them thus. Cooking
for the masses the dinner people would boil hundreds of them before leaving them
in a warming tray for way too long. Thankfully nowadays each sprout’s
individualism is acknowledged by the cooking process. Recently it was reported that
sprouts are bucking the general food trend of getting smaller by actually
increasing in size.
Sprouts are good for you too- they contain Vitamin K, C, A and B6, are very low in
saturated fat and cholesterol and also a good source of riboflavin, magnesium,
phosphorus and fibre. You wonder how it all fits in such a small thing. So the next time you encounter one on your plate; eat it up cos it'll do you good. Of course this could all backfire and people like sprout characters so much they won't eat the actual thing itself!
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