The New York Times reports that all across the Gulf Coast and the country, the costume inspiring guffaws and flying off the shelves consists of a green jumpsuit covered in oil with BP in a sunburst logo over the left breast. The BP stands for “bad planning,” according to its creator, a Long Island company called Fun World, but only Rip Van Winkle would miss the joke.
What’s unique is that it combines the horror of Halloween with the topicality of the disaster,” said Alan Geller, 53, a vice president at Fun World. “We’re like ‘Saturday Night Live’ in a costume.”
Geller, who drives an all-electric car, said he was crushed by the spill but doubted that a costume could comment until someone in a meeting described the mess as “really bad planning.”
Before they knew it, a designer retooled a “killer mechanic” costume – adding BP, changing the jumpsuit from blue to green, and the splattered blood to black oil. Now Fun World had a dangerous rigger on its hands, or a victim of corporate carelessness.
Either way, it worked. Geller has plans to produce more than 10,000 suits, with several dollars out of every sale, he says, going to families affected by the spill.
Scott Morris, whose family has spent 48 years selling dress-up – as the owners of Morris Costumes, the world’s largest costume wholesaler – said he had already sent out hundreds of the BP outfits to stores and Web sites (wrench and dead fish are not included).
He said he expected it to become this year’s favorite adult costume, which BP seems determined to ignore.
Photo by The New York Times.