Houston Chronicle

PR nightmares and ad disasters

- By Terence Cullen

Miami Dolphins players kneel before a game this month. Papa John’s ex-CEO blamed the NFL for a sales slump, making for one of 2017’s brand debacles.

These companies probably wish they could have a do-over for 2017.

Some brands commission­ed advertisem­ents that sparked fury and ire — while others faced PR nightmares that shook their company’s foundation­s.

Here are some of the year’s biggest brand fails.

• Pepsi had arguably one of the worst ads of the year, which faced an internatio­nal backlash for its insensitiv­e nature.

The soda company launched a high-priced ad in April featuring model Kendall Jenner, who decides to hit up a protest — seemingly against police violence — after finishing a photo shoot. She’s joined by a diverse group of well-dressed demonstrat­ors, who are facing off against cops in riot gear.

Then the high-paid model cracks open a can of Pepsi, hands it to a cop and cures a swath of society’s ills with the fizzy drink.

Pepsi was accused of being tone-deaf to movements against police violence, trivializi­ng a major social issue.

The soda giant canned the ad after a few days but grappled with backlash for weeks. Jenner, who took a brunt of the criticism, laid low for several weeks.

• Papa John’s might need better outreach, better PR.

Perhaps that’s the internal slogan the pizza chain could embrace after founder and ex-CEO John Schnatter made waves for blaming protesting NFL players for his slumping sales.

Schnatter told shareholde­rs during a November conference call that NFL leadership was doing a poor job at blocking players from kneeling during the national anthem. Papa John’s is a major sponsor.

Players began kneeling during the anthem last year when Colin Kaepernick took a knee to protest acts of police violence. But the protests picked up in September as a rebuke to President Donald Trump, who trashed the practice during a rally — saying it was unpatrioti­c and leading to poor viewership numbers.

“The NFL has hurt us,” Schnatter said on the call. “We are disappoint­ed the NFL and its leadership did not resolve this.”

The statement made the company’s shares plummet, prompting the ouster of the company’s most recognizab­le face. Papa John’s later apologized for the remark, saying the company supported the right to protest.

• McDonald’s came under fire in the United Kingdom for a lengthy, unsettling commercial about a young man trying to bridge a connection with his deceased father.

The 90-second spot featured a British boy rifling through his father’s belongings. Then his mother laments on how handsome, athletic, big-handed and well-kept the father was as the awkward teen realizes his traits don’t line up — from his small hands, inability to kick a soccer ball and dirty sneakers.

But at least there’s always their shared love of McDonald’s FiletO-Fish sandwich.

Advocacy groups for bereaved children in the U.K. slammed the ad, which they alleged capitalize­d on a boy’s misfortune.

“We wanted to highlight the role McDonald’s has played in our customers’ everyday lives — both in good and difficult times,” a spokesman for McDonald’s U.K. said.

• Dove found all the soap in the world couldn’t clean up this mess. It ran a GIF on its Facebook page in October that almost immediatel­y sparked outrage.

The ad began with a black woman removing her brown shirt to reveal a white woman — after using Dove’s body lotion — who then removes her shirt to reveal a Middle Eastern woman.

But that first segment sparked fury, implying black women should cleanse themselves and become white.

It came months after competitor Nivea ran a racially suggestive ad in April that proclaimed: “White Is Pure.”

Dove pulled the ad, which was roasted on social media with a wave of memes, apologized and admitted it “missed the mark.”

 ?? Wilfredo Lee / Associated Press ??
Wilfredo Lee / Associated Press
 ?? YouTube ?? Pepsi faced an internatio­nal backlash for its ad in April featuring model Kendall Jenner.
YouTube Pepsi faced an internatio­nal backlash for its ad in April featuring model Kendall Jenner.

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