Chris Reed
Apr 17, 2013

Did my blog change Burger King's bomb creative?

You may have seen my blog on April 1st about Burger King’s new BOMB advert which was illustrated by a nuclear bomb explosion (see below). Many people though that it was an April Fool’s joke such was the bad taste and poor creative.

Did my blog change Burger King's bomb creative?

However it was not it was a serious Burger King marketing campaign that as far as I am aware was used in various countries not just Singapore.  My blog pointed out that in the context of the nuclear bomb tensions between North and South Korea taking place in Asia is was tasteless and crass marketing.

It wasn’t even clever. The BOMB doesn’t even mention C for chips despite listing them as one of the ingredients alongside all the other letters (Bacon Onion Mayo BBQ sauce).

I received a massive amount of engagement of similarly outraged marketing and business professionals in the region through posting the blog on my LinkedIn account. No one could believe that Burger King would use such creative just to promote a new burger.

 

 

 

I was therefore pleasantly surprised to see Burger King’s new creative (right). As you can see they have completely altered the illustration of the bomb from nuclear to cartoon-like.

Clearly either someone at BK read my blog and realised their poor judgement or someone pointed out the amount of engagement it was getting and none of it was good. Either way they changed the creative and the new  BOMB creative obliterated the nuclear picture!

However in the light of events like the Boston bombing I am wondering whether using a bomb as your centrepiece marketing campaign for a new product is an especially good idea at all?!

About time BK blew away their creative agency! 

Source:
Campaign Asia
Tags

Related Articles

Just Published

2 hours ago

Omnicom cut 3,000 roles during 2024 ahead of IPG ...

Total headcount fell 1,000, as job reductions more than offset acquisition of 2000-strong Flywheel, and agency group plans further staff cuts to save US$330 million.

3 hours ago

40 Under 40 2024: Tala Booker, Via

What does it take to build a global communications agency in a year? Ask Tala Booker, the former HSBC executive who's rewriting the rules.

5 hours ago

Majority of marketers are unprepared to combat ...

A report from Forrester highlights the risks that companies face from deepfakes, as well as the current inadequate state of preparation to combat the problem.

5 hours ago

The unbearable cost of truth

As information retreats behind paywalls and attention splinters into subscription tiers, advertising faces its terminal paradox: We've made truth so expensive that soon, no one will be left who can afford to buy what we're selling.