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What’s the most tone-deaf advertisement or marketing campaign you’ve ever seen?

1d 5h ago by piefed.world/u/lasta in asklemmy

The kind of thing which makes you say “how could they possibly have thought this was a good idea?”

Blizzard's "Do you guys not have phones?" blunder during the Diablo Immortal reveal

that wasn't really a campaign or ad, just a gaff made by an out of touch dipshit during the reveal. It was still tonedeaf, sure, but it was hardly Blizzards marketing intention.

An out of touch dipshit? It was the principal game designer from blizzard lol. Plus pretty certain the "dipshit" in question was also not a fan of the mobile only idea.

We've just had a campaign on our city's public transport trams that said "I'm identifying as a trolleybus".

During pride month, nonetheless.

tramsgender

Is this a slur against the autistic?

Don't be so tramsphobic!

We had something similar, but it was just a play on the word transport and was just a normal bus and only for the pride parade we had, thankfully.

And

Nah, those are brilliant

I work in 911 dispatch, and there's a couple crematoriums in the county I work for. Once in a while they call to give us a heads-up when they're doing a cremation in case anyone calls about smoke.

We enter it as a "controlled burn" notification for our fire department, which I suppose it technically is, but it makes me chuckle a little that we're entering the same way we would as if someone was burning yard waste or having a bonfire or something.

I don't know how often they actually do cremations, I assume it's pretty frequent, and I'm not always the one getting the call, but based on how often I've seen these calls go in I don't think they do it for every cremation. I remember hearing somewhere through the grapevine that when the deceased is extremely obese they tend to really smoke up, so I kind of suspect those are the ones where they give us a heads-up.

Reminds me of an old billboard screw-up in Finland.

One billboard (I can't remember what the ad was actually for) was quoting an old saying: "If sauna, tar and booze won't help..." ("...the disease is going to kill you")

Next to it was an ad for a private clinic. "We've got everything to keep you healthy"

Peak of advertising, I bet these pictures spread on internet like wild fire

Amazon spent millions on a single Ring ad during the Super Bowl that was so poorly received it killed a multi-million dollar business deal.

To be clear, all the companies involved are the worst of the worst, so fuck them, but all they had to do was nothing and it would have turned out better (for them, worse for the rest of us).

The latest I can think of is Gwyneth Paltrow's ad for a luxury condo project on stolen Palestinian land by Israel.

That's a good one.

Just in general, I get the feeling that she's not all there. You can probably sell her on anything.

Holy shit I already hated the woman but this is next level. Got any proof?

Just search for it on YouTube. Gwyneth Paltrow Israel ad.

shes been selling scams for quite a while, not surprising she is willing to do this.

That Pepsi ad during BLM.

And The Boys remake of it a couple years later

In hindsight this has to be a far right psy op. It was a year after Trump was elected and they definitely wanted to see an end to both the BLM and MeToo movements.

I still think that the Boy Scouts of America (BSA) remarketing themselves after decades of abuse scandals, and they settle on the name "Scouting America" or... SA...

I get that they wanted to make scouting an all gender thing. That's good.... but they probably shoulda workshopped that name a bit more given the history and context of the organization.

The Secret Service is a thing and nobody bats an eye, sooo....

Right......

but the Secret Sevice was established in the mid 1800s... well before the abbreviation SS had other meanings.

The Scouts decided to rebrand a year ago... SA has been in use for over a decade now.

Hardly the same thing.

Not the same thing, true, but other organisations have been asked to rename and rebrand, no? I just sometimes wonder why that particular acronym is never questioned even in passing.

Probably because nobody calls it the SS

What else is it supposed to stand for? South Africa?

SA is also the abbreviation for sexual assault

Sturmabteilung, Hitler's personal storm troopers that helped him rise to power

probably not naming the organazation having abbreviation of "SA" too.

That's what they said...

YXGaE2mNEfP7HIp.jpg

The "hide the pain" facial expression really sells it.

I live in a neighborhood where every day I see more and more people who can't make ends meet. Shops and services are closing every month and the storefronts stand empty.

The bank near me has signs up in their window "Celebrating 250 Years of the American Dream!"

Read the fucking room.

There was an ad from Coke entirely generated by AI last Christmas. It wasn’t even cute or on point, there was editing error, etc. People complained so much that they pulled out the ad

The only thing I remembered about that commercial, is the number of tires changed in each shot...

All coke's still image ads are AI now. Clearly AI and creepy as fuck.

Here's one off their site:

It just gives you the ick when you see it in public.

At the same time a french supermarket chain released a human made animation which was a big success

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Na9VmMNJvsA

What inspired the post: a cigarette lighter that was handed out as part of an election campaign with the slogan “FOR OUR CHILDREN” on it. The lighter is too bulky for children’s hands /s

I remember General Electric got a lot of flak for a commercial of theirs, meant to "celebrate America's hard workers" or whatever.

They used the song Sixteen Tons.

No way lmao

That's a new level of tonedeaf

Or an incredible troll from the inside lol

I JUST read an article about Starbuck's bungled Gwangju promo in Korea. I'm betting that inspired this post, but if not, look it up, it's a great example.

The timing of the post was a coincidence (the actual inspiration is in a separate comment), but this is indeed a great example of the title. I just read up on this incident, and oof…😬

The coffee chain triggered an uproar when it attempted to promote a series of stainless-steel tumblers it called “SS Tank” by declaring May 18 to be “Tank Day.” The date marks the anniversary of the 1980 pro-democracy uprising in the southern city of Gwangju. It was violently suppressed by Seoul’s military government at the time, which deployed troops, tanks and helicopters, leaving hundreds dead or injured.

The campaign further fueled outrage by using the slogan “Thwack it on the table!” which many read as a reference to a notorious 1987 police statement that attempted to cover up the torture death of student activist Park Jong-chol. Authorities had falsely said Park died after investigators “hit the desk with a thwack.”

🤦‍♀️

the "don't hire people" ones

constant bombardment of AI this or that tech, business ads.

I have one I still remember 20 years later. Although the stupid decision wasn't made by the company buying an ad, but where the newspaper placed it.

A newspaper placed an ad by eon how they "securing tomorrow's gas today" under an article about an exhibition of the fate of Sinti people in Nazi Germany (the fate was Auschwitz).

😨😨

I believe Starbucks right now in Korea wins something with stupidity

Came here looking for this. Insane that someone thought of it, someone agreed with it, and someone approved it.

Marketers chose the “thwack” slogan after consulting an AI tool for suggestions, Shinsegae Group said. It turned out some managers who approved the campaign never opened the email attachments showing the marketing material.

This is insane 😂

That shitty PSA Ajit Pai made when he helped kill Net Neutrality during his time on the FCC.

Rugs a million having a closing down sale for over 20 years.

It's been 20 years. You clearly aren't closing.

There's a furniture store near me that's always going out of business and having closing sales (at least for the last few decades). But the name on the store always seems to change every year. I'm wondering if it's just the same owners that shut the business down and rotate out names every now and then.

I guess that's one way to get out of fulfilling warranties?

Needs to be more high tempo

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GCDkHhbbGO4

Oh dammit, I need a new rug but I saw this commercial 2 weeks ago so they're definitely closed for good already. Guess I'll find another shop!

There is a carpet shop having "final sales" or "closing sales" in the next town since I started reading newspapers 50 years ago. The carpet shop survived the newspaper. And it is still having "final sales".

That old Saturn Ion commercial. A car ad about a world without cars, accidentally showing what a complete waste of space their own product is.

IMO, the easiest answer is always gonna be literally any pro genAI ads, so I'mma go with something different.

I don't remember the brand, but it was this car ad where someone sealed themselves in their car in their garage and was doing the thing where you set it up so the emission fumes backfire into the vehicle and you commit suicide that way. The ad basically boiled down to how their car was so clean you couldn't kill yourself off the emission fumes and shit.

I really hope anyone involved with it and/or approved it were either fired and/or had to take some sensitivity course because suicide is something you should never joke about.

Amazon Climate Pledge Arena

after they fired the two women who organized the internal protest campaign to pressure Amazon leadership to make a pledge to improve their climate impact

Another one near me, not technically an ad but a name: The Dead River Company. They deliver oil.

Spaghetti-ohs twitting: Take a moment to think of pearl harbor with their O-shaped mascot holding an american flag. I'm not american, neither have I ever tried Spaghetti-ohs until today I say Oh-oh-Spaghetti-ohs when something bad is gonna happen as it was one of the first interenet controversies I was interrsted enough to follow.

Also a newer one: Heidi Klum and her daughter & Mom all lingerie commercial for intimissimi. It kinda missed the mark beucause all 3 tried to look very seductive, but how it was shot it make it look very homoerotical, which is wierd because you got a grandma, a mum and a daughter trying to seduce each other...

Wow, it gets worse the more you read!

This ad honestly reads like satire. I can't believe this came out of Texas.

Do not share advertising. Mocking is sharing, not stopping. The only attention we need tp pay to advertising is blocking its presentation and banning its production.

What's crazy is I see far less (near zero) advertising than when I was younger.

That's the one nice thing about the current internet I guess.

Back in the day it was newspapers, tv, billboards, radio, flyers, theatres, and so on. Now it's nothing.

The old Apple ads in the UK that had Mitchell and Webb, where Webb was the 'I'm a PC' nerd. If I wanted a computer, I'd sooner have one like Mark Corrigan than Jez.

Why limit yourself to just those two options anyway, when there's a car superior one out there that oozes freedom.

I run Super Hans, btw.

"It's all about good jeans." - Sydney Sweeny

This ad which was greenlit by Scott Morrison, who at the time was just some gronk in advertising.

Despite the ad causing a sharp decline in tourism he somehow fell upward and ended up Prime Minister of Australia.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Y-ZLr9ePuj8

Being PM didn't keep his foot out of his mouth, did it?

There was a partnership between a genealogy group and a cruise line. It makes sense that the people who like one would like the other. The cruise line put out an ad “sail the Atlantic and trace your family” Which is kind of tone deaf for a number of people.

That sounds right up Boomer alley

Great learning opportunity if you chain them below decks the entire time.

Every time the self checkout prompts me to donate to charity.

Sir this is a Loblaws, why don't you donate.

(They've jacked the cost from "round up to the nearest dollar" to like $4.95 for some reason too)

This billboard that, translated from French, essentially says "same traffic, no more gas", on the bridge to Montréal, which has loads of other transportation options where you wouldn't get stuck in traffic.

This billboard

I'm from the US and live in the suburbs, so public transportation is nearly non existent around me.

Visited Montreal a couple years ago for the solar eclipse, took Amtrak up from New York (technically it would have been a little faster to drive but not by a whole lot.)

And then once we were there, I felt absolutely no need for a car. The subway and a short walk got us everywhere we wanted to go, and we never found ourselves waiting around long for the next train. We didn't end up needing to take one but we saw plenty of buses around too.

And the bike lanes- actual protected bike lanes! They even had little plows clearing the bike lanes when we got a bit of snow while we were there. I could actually see myself choosing to get around on a bike if I lived there, there aren't many parts of the city or suburbs where I live where I'd feel safe to commute on a bike.

I spent a week there, and even with probably some extra traffic from eclipse tourists I felt that there was never much traffic in any part of the city we visited and we got around a lot.

And with RESO you can cover a lot of ground downtown on foot and barely need to step outside.

I haven't traveled abroad much, I'm sure there's other cities in the world that have all that and more, but it definitely blew my mind as an American.

I'm not usually much of a city person, but I could absolutely see myself living in Montreal. If I thought my dog could adjust to city life well and I spoke at least passable French, I might have considered relocating. It's probably the only city I've visited so far (again, not that I've traveled much) that I really look forward to visiting again someday.

If you're in the northeastern US looking for a vacation, get to new York, take the train to Montreal, and just experience it for week. Open your eyes to what we're missing out on.

And not for nothing, all of the food I had while I was there was absolutely amazing. It's worth it just for that.

That Fortnight ad where they redid Apple's 1984-style ad, basically saying what a grave miscarriage of justice it was that Apple got too much money from their game, and Epic didn't get quite as much of their billions of dollars as they would've liked.

...At the height of the BLM protests...

I once saw a billboard that said somethimg like: if ads for cigarettes are gonna be illegal, it's not gonna be long and you won't see an ad of a sausage anymore.

Like i saw that and was like: good

Who is driving by that and foaming out of their mouth: NOT MY SAUSAGE!

Meat-eating and patriarchy are tightly linked.

Was in a flyer I got years ago.

?

Mixing produces a toxic gas

When bleach is mixed with ammonia, toxic gases called chloramines are produced. Exposure to chloramine gases can cause the following symptoms:

  • Coughing.
  • Nausea.
  • Shortness of breath.
  • Watery eyes.
  • Chest pain.
  • Irritation to the throat, nose, and eyes.
  • Wheezing.
  • Pneumonia and fluid in the lungs.

https://doh.wa.gov/community-and-environment/contaminants/bleach-mixing-dangers

I spent a lot more effort learning French than chemistry. Whew!

I once saw a billboard that only had text and a picture of some guy.

The text read "You can't block this ad"

It made me so irrationally angry and I still to this day don't even know what they were advertising for.

I'd guess it would be the owner of the billboard advertising the space. I've definitely seen that before, often accompanied by a "x thousand people see this every day!" type message.

Advertising advertising is one of the most hilarious things to me.

I hate ads on principle but an ad for an ad is just a level of debauchery I can barely fathom

NVidia recently:

"... Like how everyone has a home cinema."

"The 2070 is too old! Buy a new GPU, I need the money."

Me, glancing over at 1660 Super...

I was abroad recently. At the radio I got an ad for a company from my country. At the end of the ad, they said their slogan... in their own language. How do you expect people to get your slogan if it's in a language they don't speak!?

Slogans in foreign languages are sometimes considered prestigious or exotic. They're saying it for the vibes, not for the literal meaning of the words.

Wow, really? I'd never heard a slogan in a foreign language before. It must vary by country

Volkswagen had "Fahrvergnügen" in the early 90s. I can remember that campaign took off for a while.

Fun fact: That word didn't exist in the German language before, it was created specifically for this ad.

Rock and Roll Hairstyle USA

Your country doesn't speak English, by chance?

No no of course not xD

That grubhub cgi one with the fat assed people dancing.

https://youtu.be/X6tT_PMnEbU

or the peddling AI detection software, by using AI.

The Lorax movie tie-in ads

Decades ago, Coca-Cola was trying to enter the market in Saudi Arabia. They ran an ad where "pilgrims" walked around a giant coke bottle, in the same way that Muslim pilgrims in Mecca walk around the Kaaba during Hajj and Umrah. It was very, very poorly received, to say the least, and many attribute it as the main reason why Pepsi has dominated the market instead of Coca-Cola.

SNL made a sketch about it: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Pn8pwoNWseM

I'm not sure if this applies. Yesterday, in Canada, I saw a commercial for a cellphone network provider company that showed a bunch of their logos dot across Canada on a globe map and they said "anywhere in Canada" and then the globe spun around as far away from the usa as possible and they said "or anywhere in the world". I thought that was a very subtle diss against the usa. Sometimes I see Jesus on burnt toast though so maybe I'm reading something that's not there.

How is that tone deaf?