The Cracker Barrel Logo Controversy, Explained

đ usncan Note: The Cracker Barrel Logo Controversy, Explained
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CANADA – 2025/08/22: In this photo illustration, the Cracker Barrel Old Country Store logo is seen displayed on a smartphone screen. (Photo Illustration by Thomas Fuller/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
The new Cracker Barrel logo has managed to ignite an online controversy, the latest battleground of the culture war.
What Is The Cracker Barrel Logo Controversy?
Cracker Barrel has simplified its logo, erasing the iconic âUncle Herschelâ and his barrel. Now, Cracker Barrel is represented by a simple yellow shape that barely resembles a barrel.
Cracker Barrel is far from unique in doing thisâmodern minimalist trends see many corporations wipe the personality from their logos, often leaving only their name, written in simple font.
No one seems to like this trend, and many social media users have compiled images to show the comparison between the colorful, mascot-heavy logos of the past, and the sterile, bland logos that have replaced them.
This kind of commentary often crosses over into reactionary, aggressively nostalgic accounts who lament for the bygone days of 90âs consumerism, when McDonalds still looked like a kidâs restaurant and Pizza Hut still had that distinctive âhatâ shape.
Most of the backlash against Cracker Barrelâs new look came from reactionary culture warriors who labelled the new logo as âwoke.â Many right-wing accounts banded together to protest the change, viewing the corporate rebrand through a political lens.
In the wake of the backlash, Florida Representative Byron Donalds unexpectedly declared that he had given his life to Christ in the parking lot of a Cracker Barrel.
The culture war is running on reheated leftoversâitâs hard not to escape the suspicion that many were pretending to care about this issue, perhaps for the sake of engagement.
Following Trumpâs re-election, reactionaries declared a âvictory over wokeâ (which was recently satirized by South Park), but it seems that âwokeâ must return, in order to describe things to be mad at.
The word âwokeâ is overused, vague, and famously difficult to defineânow that bland corporate logos have entered its umbrella, the word seems to have ascended into pure abstraction.
Those who were upset at the change were mercilessly mocked.
Some commentators even tried to diagnose the true anxieties underlying the culture war, beyond the logo.
The brand account behind Steak ‘n Shake also got involved in the backlash, posting a picture of Cracker Barrelâs new logo, edited to read âfire the CEO.â
A few commentators clarified that they were against the rebrand, but not because of politics.
Others insisted on keeping things politicalâconservative commentator Ann Coulter posted a meme comparing the original logo to Sydney Sweeney (who recently experienced a backlash to her âGood Jeansâ ad), and the new logo to activist Greta Thunberg.
The culture war has been fought over movies, TV shows, video games and ads, but this might be the most baffling, pointless skirmish so far.
In a statement to Forbes, Cracker Barrel clarified that Uncle Herschel âremains front and center in our restaurants and on our menu.â
Cracker Barrel was founded by a representative for Shell Oil in the late sixties, who hoped that the restaurant would improve gasoline sales, a uniquely American origin storyâearly locations even contained on-site gas pumps.
The restaurant was intended to invoke nostalgia from the get-go, as the logo and interior were designed to remind customers of an old-fashioned country store.
Cracker Barrelâs simulacrum of a mom-and-popâs seems to have been effective, despite the reality of a sprawling corporate franchise.
Ironically, the original logo of Cracker Barrel was text onlyâUncle Herschel and his barrel were added in a 1977 rebrand.
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