elf coffee sadness 2

Jon Favreauโ€™s 2003 film Elf is a modern holiday classic. For anyone who spends this time of the year hanging tinsel and putting up string lights itโ€™s in the same league as films like A Christmas Story and Itโ€™s A Wonderful Life:ย a beloved, required yearly must-watch.

Elf does everything a Christmas movie should. Itโ€™s family friendly, heartwarming, funny, more and than a little bit weird. It also happens to offer an excellent lesson about marketing in the coffee world.

For those unfamiliar, Elf is the story of Buddy, a human raised by Christmas elves at the North Pole who spends one Christmas season connecting with his biological father in New York. The majority of the filmโ€™s gags coming from the culture clash between Buddyโ€™s wide-eyed joyous elfen roots and the cynical New Yorkers he finds himself surrounded by. Buddy draws stares from passersby as he runs in circles in a revolving door, jumps on beds in a department store, and when he credulously believes an advertising slogan.

elf world's best cup of coffee sign

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After Buddy travels through the seven levels of the candy cane forest past the sea of twirly-swirly gumdrops and walks through the Lincoln Tunnel, one of his first experiences of New York life is when he notices a sign hanging outside a midtown diner. It reads โ€œWORLDโ€™S BEST CUP OF COFFEE.โ€ Buddy is overwhelmed with joy due to his earnest and loving nature upon reading the sign, running in and announcing โ€œYou did it! Congratulations! Worldโ€™s best cup of coffee. Great job everybody! Great to meet you!โ€ to an entirely indifferent group of servers working the breakfast shift.

This is a joke, of course. The coffee is not actually good. Even if we gave them the benefit of the doubt that this run-down-looking diner secretly has an amazing coffee program, it is confirmed that the coffee in this diner isnโ€™t actually that great by Zooey Deschanelโ€™s character Jovie. [This film is indisputably Deschanel’s finest role. โ€”Ed.] On a date with Buddy she takes part in a blind taste test and announces that the unnamed establishmentโ€™s prize beverage โ€œtastes like a crappy cup of coffee.โ€ While diner coffee isnโ€™t without its charm, it is simply impossible to believe that this place has the โ€œworldโ€™s best cup of coffeeโ€ when it clearly isnโ€™t even the best cup of coffee within walking distance of the Lincoln Tunnel. (This author would contend that honor goes to Culture Espresso at 38th & 6th, but Sprudge welcomes other opinions.)

elf blind coffee taste test

This raises the question though: why? Why is this a joke? Buddyโ€™s earnestness is certainly unusual, but what does it say about human society that we take his lack of cynicism as a joke? Throughout the film Buddy the Elfโ€™s actionsโ€”while funnyโ€”remind us about the glee of taking the world at face value. The Christmas tree at Rockefeller Center is a truly spectacular sight, so why is it a joke that it inspires such slack-jawed awe when Buddy beholds it? Skipping down the street with your sweetheart is a truly joyous activity, so why is it played as Buddy being a silly man when he does so with Jovie? So then the question is raised: whatโ€™s so funny about Buddy accepting the sign โ€œWORLDโ€™S BEST CUP OF COFFEEโ€ at face value?

The answer of course is that we as modern people expect that marketing claims are not the most truthful statements in the world. Sure, a statement that can easily and demonstrably be proven false is unlikely to be found. Claiming a coffee is decaffeinated when it hasnโ€™t been is a great way to open oneself up to a lawsuit. Claims that have no fixed definition though, like โ€œall naturalโ€ or โ€œethically sourced,โ€ or โ€œworldโ€™s best cup of coffeeโ€ surround us. While they might be justified as โ€œnot technically lying,โ€ a claim of โ€œnot technically lyingโ€ is in no way a virtuous claim.

elf looking at tree

I would never claim that every marketing claim needs to be one that is backed up by objective evidence thatโ€™s verifiable by a third party. It would be very difficult to point to objective evidence to support claims that a coffee has a medium body and notes of cashew and caramel, but itโ€™s broadly considered good to put tasting notes on a coffee. So where do we draw the line?

While on one level itโ€™s a silly movie about putting syrup on spaghetti, I also think that Elf inspires me to think that a better world is possible, one where claims like โ€œworldโ€™s greatest cup of coffeeโ€ donโ€™t need to be understood as acceptable exaggerations in a fallen world. I would propose a โ€œBuddy the Elfโ€ test for anyone in the coffee communications business. For any given claim about your coffee, ask yourself, โ€œif Buddy the Elf were to read this and accept it completely at face value, would I stand by my statement? Or would I stare at him blankly the same way that those diner servers did when he congratulated them on having the worldโ€™s greatest cup?โ€ If a marketing statement can be laid low by Will Ferrel in yellow tights, maybe it isnโ€™t worth sharing. May we all strive to be as earnest and full of joy as Buddy the Elf.

elf drinking coffee in the corner

Jackson Oโ€™Brien is a coffee professional and freelance journalist based in Minneapolis.ย Read more Jackson Oโ€™Brien for Sprudge.

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