‘Hell on Wheels’ Is Coming: Squawking Chicken Truck to Ruffle Feathers Downtown
For Immediate Release:
November 10, 2022
Contact:
Robin Goist 202-483-7382
Wilmington, N.C. – Local diners just might think twice about chowing down on fried chicken after they see—and hear—“Hell on Wheels,” PETA’s new guerilla-marketing campaign featuring a life-size chicken transport truck covered with images of real chickens crammed into crates on their way to a slaughterhouse, complete with actual recorded sounds of the birds’ cries and a subliminal message every 10 seconds suggesting that people go vegan. The truck will make stops at Chick-fil-A and Dave’s Hot Chicken downtown and drive around Cape Fear Community College and Williston Middle School on Friday as part of the group’s national tour.
“Behind every barbecued wing or bucket of fried chicken is a once-living, sensitive individual who was crammed onto a truck for a terrifying, miserable journey to their death,” says PETA Executive Vice President Tracy Reiman. “PETA’s ‘Hell on Wheels’ truck is an appeal to anyone who eats chicken to remember that the meat industry is cruel to birds and that the kindest meal is a vegan one.”
Birds killed for their flesh are bred to grow such unnaturally large upper bodies that their legs often become crippled under the weight, and the sheds to which they’re confined are so filthy that the red, watery goo in packages of chicken is referred to as “fecal soup.” They’re trucked through all weather extremes, sometimes over hundreds of miles and without any food or water, to slaughterhouses, where their throats are slit—often while they’re still conscious.
The “Hell on Wheels” tour previously staked out chicken restaurants in Greensboro, Raleigh, and Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Upcoming stops on the tour include Charleston, South Carolina; Jacksonville, Florida; New Orleans; and Savannah, Georgia.
PETA—whose motto reads, in part, that “animals are not ours to eat”—opposes speciesism, a human-supremacist worldview. For more information, please visit PETA.org or follow the group on Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram.