return to GoVeg.com
 Vegetarian 101  Spacer  Recipes  Spacer  Videos  Spacer  FREE Vegetarian Starter Kit  Spacer  Donate Now 
 
Subscribe to E-News
Search
Why Vegetarian?
Cruelty to Animals Cruelty to Animals
Amazing Animals Amazing Animals
Health Issues Health Issues
The Environment The Environment
More »
Meet the Animals
Meet the Animals: Chickens Chickens
Meet the Animals: Cows Cows
Meet the Animals: Fish Fish
Meet the Animals: Pigs Pigs
Meet the Animals: Turkeys Turkeys
Meet the Animals: Ducks and Geese Ducks and Geese
More »
Resources
Resources: Get Active Get Active
Resources: Recipes Recipes
Resources: 'Meet Your Meat' 'Meet Your Meat' PETA TV
Resources: Take the 30-Day Veg Pledge Take the 30-Day Veg Pledge
Resources: Famous Vegetarians Famous Vegetarians
Resources: Books and Web Sites Books and Web Sites
Resources: Literature and Merchandise Literature and Merchandise
Resources: In the News In the News
Resources: Investigations Investigations
Resources: Photo Gallery Photo Gallery
Free Vegetarian Starter Kit
Sign Up For PETA E-News
Support Our Work
Work For PETA
peta2
PETA Kids
 
Corporate Campaigns

Select News Coverage About PETA's Farmed-Animal Welfare Campaigns

"Through a string of highly visible demonstrations and extreme public relations tactics, PETA has become both a proficient corporate arm-twister and an effective public relations machine, says Terrie Dort, [National Council of Chain Restaurants] president. 'Whether you like it or not, PETA's strategy is very effective,' Dort says."
Progressive Grocer, Jan. 1, 2002

"There are a lot of corporations appeasing these groups, hoping PETA will eat them last."
—Nick Nichols, former communications officer for Ronald Reagan and CEO of Washington, D.C.-based public relations firm Nichols-Dezenhall, in Investor's Business Daily, Mar. 27, 2002

"'There has been a shift in public opinion,' Dort acknowledged. '[T]he ad campaigns that PETA has engaged in have been successful in shifting public sentiment.'"
Nation's Restaurant News, Dec. 17, 2001

"Burger King Inc., McDonald's Corp., Wendy's International, and Applebee's Neighborhood Bar & Grill already have issued separate standards after being pressured by PETA."
—Meat-industry journal Feedstuffs, Jul. 8, 2002

"'Consumers can move retailers in directions they don't want to go,' said [Linda Toby] Oswald-Felker, Safeway's vice-president of public affairs. She cited the recent 'Shameway' campaign waged against the company by the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. 'They turned on the light of an issue we need to address,' she said. PETA's video footage of animal welfare violations by Safeway suppliers led to charges of animal cruelty and the introduction of new measures by the grocer."
The Western Producer, Jan. 27, 2003

"Jim Reeves, president of the U.S. Beef Brands Council … said groups such as People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals have issued a wake-up call for the industry and forced the issue of improving animal husbandry on producers."
The Western Producer, Jan. 27, 2003

"People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals scored a major victory this year when the McDonald's, Burger King, and Wendy's fast-food chains adopted policies designed to improve the treatment of animals they get from suppliers. The policies include unannounced visits to supplier slaughterhouses and threats to terminate contracts with meat processors that mistreat animals. The campaign has picked up support in Congress. Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., added $1 million to the [U.S.] Department of Agriculture's budget to ensure enforcement of 1958 federal laws requiring that food animals be properly treated at slaughterhouses and be unconscious when they are slaughtered. Byrd has not previously been involved in animal-rights issues."
—Scripps Howard News Service, Oct. 30, 2001

"People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, or PETA, challenged McDonald's. Not so much for serving meat but for being party to a system of cruelty. In August 2000, McDonald's capitulated and agreed to only buy meat from suppliers that could ensure minimum humane treatment of livestock. On June 28, PETA secured even grander promises from Burger King. … I say bravo. PETA is not just the most raucous of the big humane groups, but it deserves the trophy right now for doing the most for the largest number of animals—those that feed us."
Los Angeles Times columnist John Balzar, Jul. 13, 2001

"People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) claimed victory last June after more than [800] 'Murder King' protest rallies spread over five months prompted Burger King, the world's second-largest fast-food chain, to announce new guidelines for its meat and egg suppliers, including extra water, wing room, and fresh air for egg-laying hens and mandatory stunning of pigs and cattle prior to slaughter. Surprise inspections by Burger King auditors will help to ensure that suppliers treat animals humanely right up to the end. McDonald's established similar guidelines a year earlier, following a PETA campaign that included distribution of 'Unhappy Meals' with ['wounded,'] ['bloody'] farm-animal toys."
Discover Magazine, Jan. 2002

"McDonald's buckled first. Then Burger King. Now, Wendy's has plans to bolster its animal welfare standards following intense pressure from an animal rights group. People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) today will announce the end of its 2-month-old campaign against Wendy's. The move comes one day after the fast-food chain told PETA it would strengthen oversight of its suppliers and improve treatment of animals before and during slaughter."
USA Today, Sep. 2001

Home
Select News Coverage
'McCruelty' Campaign
'Murder King' Campaign
'Wicked Wendy's' Campaign
'Shameway' Campaign
'Kentucky Fried Cruelty' Campaign
Smithfield Foods: Cruel to Pigs and Humans
Factory Farming
Photo Gallery
Undercover Investigations
Delicious Recipes
Free Vegetarian Starter Kit
Vegetarian 101
Watch 'Meet Your Meat'
   l    * Printer-Friendly    l    E-Mail This Site    l    Subscribe to E-News    
About PETA      Donate Now      Privacy Policy      Disclaimer      PETA Web Sites     
Click here to return to PETA.org