“…Yet, whilst research has shown that people become vegan for ethical, health, and to a lesser extent, environmental reasons (Greenebaum, 2012b), it is the ethical basis that is the most historically consistent form of veganism (The Vegan Society, 2014a), enabling a more sustained and longer-term commitment, and a secondary motivation towards environmental concerns (Fox and Ward, 2008). These ethical reasons are routinely denied articulation in mainstream media culture (Cole and Morgan, 2011). In light of these characteristics of vegan philosophy and practice, alongside negative media representations, this article asks the following: how might the cultural intermediary work of celebrity vegans operate to make vegan ethics more accessible and mainstream, firstly, through their status as spectacular signs of veganism, and secondly, by framing veganism through discourses of compassion and kindness?…”