The Atlantic

Fukushima Industries Has Made a Very Unfortunate Mascot Choice

Published: Oct 14, 2013 Crawled: Nov 6, 2025 at 1:57 AM Length: 307 words
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Say Fukushima, and most people probably dont think refrigerators. Thanks to the 2011 disaster in Japans Fukushima province, things like radiation or nuclear leak are more likely to spring to mind. Say Fukushima, and most people probably dont think refrigerators. Thanks to the 2011 disaster in Japans Fukushima province, things like radiation or nuclear leak are more likely to spring to mind. That might make things tough for fridge-maker Fukushima Industries, which had nothing to do with the 2011 nuclear meltdown. But unfortunately, the firms new mascot probably isnt going to do much to change that. Via RocketNews24 , heres... Fukuppy: Whats Fukuppys purpose? Ask him! I fly around on my awesome wings, patrolling supermarket showcases and kitchen refrigerators, explains Fukuppy on Fukushima Industries site (translation from RocketNews24). I can talk to vegetables, fruit, meat, and fish and can check on their health! Though Fukuppy does claim to be a bit of a klutz, his name probably doesnt have anything to do with what it sounds like pronounced in English. For one, his name is actually pronounced foo-koo-pee. But among English-speakers, Fukuppy probably seems like it would be a fitting name for a Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant mascot. The chief cause of the 2011 meltdown was human error , not the tsunami/earthquake, found a report commissioned by the Japanese government. In July, the head of Japans Nuclear Regulation Authority admitted that the plant has been contaminating the ocean for two years since he and his staff have been unable to pinpoint the leaks origin. As a result, as many as 80,000 people could get cancer , two nuclear experts told the Georgia Straight, a Canadian news weekly. Top photo: Fukushima Industries TheAtlantic.com 2025 The Atlantic Monthly Group. All Rights Reserved. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply

Article Details

Article ID
8395
Article Name
309975
Date Published
Oct 14, 2013
Date Crawled
Nov 6, 2025 at 1:57 AM
Newspaper Website
theatlantic.com