McDonald’s ditches the happy in Happy Meals in an attempt to raise awareness for mental health

By Abby Amoakuh

Published May 16, 2024 at 12:36 PM

Reading time: 1 minute

57907

Fast food chain and purveyor of Big Macs McDonald’s has chosen to remove the smile from its Happy Meal packaging instead opting to sell simple red boxes called ‘The Meal’ to celebrate Mental Health Awareness Week.

The redesign is supposed to counter toxic positivity, described as the pressure only to display positive emotions and suppress any negative ones, amid new studies which reveal that loneliness and depression affect children as much as it does adults.

In the UK, roughly 48 per cent of children reportedly feel pressured to be happy all the time. “It’s ok not to be happy all the time,” is thus the statement ‘The Meal’ will be adorned with instead of the classic yellow smile.

A new nationally representative survey of 1,000 girls commissioned by the Girl Scouts of the USA (GSUSA) revealed that nearly two-thirds of young girls aged between 5 and 7 reported feelings of loneliness. The percentage ticked up with age, showing that nearly three-quarters of girls between the ages of 11 and 13 felt the same way.

This is of course contrary to the popular belief that children are always happy, energetic and enthusiastic.

To respect and validate these feelings of suppressed sadness, McDonald’s took it upon themselves to distribute 2.5 million ‘Unhappy Meals’ to more than a thousand locations across the UK. The boxes will be accompanied by stickers that represent different emotions so kids can give ‘The Meal’ whatever mood they’d like, for instance, sadness.

I’m not sure about you but I think that whoever is in the McDonald’s marketing department must have been seriously starved for ideas if the best thing they could come up with is ‘The Meal’. Besides removing the selling point from its most popular product, wouldn’t wiping that smile off a child’s box filled with a toy and nuggets also wipe the smile off their face?

I am instantly hit by vivid memories of me as a child where the mention of a Happy Meal was able to completely turn my day around. Children might be depressed, but if you ask me they are also quite easy to cheer up.

But perhaps this doesn’t address the sadness of children, who feel forced to put on a smile when they parents hand them a Happy Meal, although just aren’t feeling like chips today. Maybe I am too cynical?

“We know how important it is to help stimulate open conversations about mental health in families,” said Louise Page, McDonald’s Head of Consumer Communications & Partnerships.

“Through this change to our Happy Meal box, we hope many more families are encouraged to kickstart positive conversations around children’s emotions and wellbeing.”

Keep On Reading

By Abby Amoakuh

The BDS movement and gen Z are boycotting Disney+, McDonald’s, and Starbucks. Here’s why

By Alma Fabiani

McDonald’s says it plans to make its toys less harmful to the environment

By Malavika Pradeep

Bizzare ‘diet cult’ that lives without food and water caught its leader eating McDonald’s

By Abby Amoakuh

Kieran Culkin cringes as co-star Julie Delpy says she wishes she was African American

By Charlie Sawyer

What’s in the 2024 Oscars gift bag that’s worth more than most people’s annual salary?

By Charlie Sawyer

Justice for Billie Piper: Why she’s worth so much more than her ex-husband Laurence Fox

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

Of course the US far right is spreading false claims that the Lakewood Church shooter was trans

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

Strippers’ bill of rights: Understanding the new law protecting adult dancers in Washington State

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

Is Kylie Jenner broke? New conspiracy theory suggests the billionaire might be out of cash

By Abby Amoakuh

From Disney star to space start-up CEO, here’s everything you need to know about Bridgit Mendler

By Abby Amoakuh

Challengers representatives step in after movie poster with racial slur goes viral

By Charlie Sawyer

A guide on how to save on your energy bills after CEO of British Gas owner admits he can’t justify his £4.5M salary

By Abby Amoakuh

As young people turn to chatbots for therapy, we ask a mental health expert about the consequences

By Charlie Sawyer

New York Attorney General sues some of the US’ biggest pro-life groups for unsafe Abortion Pill Reversal treatment

By Abby Amoakuh

Move over rat girl summer, TikTok celebrates the hot rodent boyfriend trend

By Charlie Sawyer

Vivek Ramaswamy shares Taylor Swift conspiracy and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. denies OnlyFans rumour

By Charlie Sawyer

Who is Pookie, the wife of Jeff Puckett, aka the most complimentary man on TikTok?

By Abby Amoakuh

The internet is obsessing over Bridgerton characters Benedict and Francesca’s sexualities 

By Charlie Sawyer

Dua Lipa fan and Nicki Minaj fan get into a real-life standoff over internet beef

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

Boycott BrewDog trends on X after allegations of racism, EDL association, and employee discrimination circulate