I can’t really complain about Starbucks, I don’t go there. I not into expensive desgner coffee. Just give me a cheap cup of “Joe” and you’ve made my day.
I’m no fan of Starbucks, but is there any actual evidence that the picture on the cup is intended as a picture of Lillith?
Beautiful.. they want to gross out 99.9% of their customers.
It's a mermaid on the cup.
As for lesbian baristas -- maybe it's just twentysomething women with the style of the moment.
How a Topless Mermaid Made the Starbucks Cup an Icon
Every day, millions of people walk into any of 20,519 Starbucks in 65 countries, and most walk back out with the same thing: a white cardboard coffee cup. Do you know the one? Of course you do. Starbucks cups have become part of the cultural backdrop, an unconscious reminder that the brand exists, observed management consultant and business speaker Can Akdeniz. Its an extremely powerful piece of packaging.
And every year, Starbucks sells somewhere around 5 billion of them.
The story of how a simple paper cup got to be the most recognizable to-go container in the world is a strange one, and its about to get even stranger. Because, before we talk about the cup, we have to talk about breastsa mermaid with breasts, actually.
In 1971, Starbucks (then a mere fledging coffee shop on the Seattle waterfront) was looking for a logo, something that would embody the seafaring history of its home city. The three founders hired a consultant named Terry Heckler. According to CEO Howard Schultz, Heckler pored over old marine books until he came up with a logo based on an old 16th-century Norse woodcut: a two-tailed mermaid. (Medieval-minded blogger Carl Pyrdum has pointed out that there were no Norsemen left by the 16th century, but lets just move on.)
The mermaid was exotic. She was also topless. At first, and despite some complaints, Starbucks just rolled with it. As Schultz later explained, Bare breasted and Rubenesque, [the mermaid] was supposed to be as seductive as the coffee itself. But then the time came to put the logo on the delivery trucks, and that was problematic. The logo was huge, Hecklers website relates, and so were the mermaids breasts.
Starbucks solved the problem by restyling the mermaids hairdo so it draped over the trouble spots. Then, in 1986, entrepreneur Schultz bought out the original Starbucks partners and modified the logo by placing the mermaid in the center of a green circle, a striking and memorable badge for that white cardboard cup.
The resulting device became an icon nearly overnight. Bryant Simon, author of Everything but the Coffee: Learning About America From Starbucks, relates the folklore of how Madison Avenue interns used to splurge $5 on a Starbucks latte, drink it and then carry the empty cup around for the remainder of the week. They wanted people to see them with the cup, he said. Through the intervention of users, Starbucks was able to make that cup shorthand for someone who was discerning, sophisticated and had enough money to waste on coffee.
http://www.adweek.com/news/advertising-branding/how-topless-mermaid-made-starbucks-cup-icon-160396