The Mercury News

Dodge deletes ‘roadkill’ social media posts in response to backlash

- By Jamie Butters

Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s’s Dodge brand deleted social-media posts promoting drag races that took place the day the driver of one of its vehicles killed a protester and injured at least 19 others in Charlottes­ville, Virginia.

Until Tuesday afternoon, the last four posts on Dodge’s Twitter account used the hashtag #RoadkillNi­ghts, referring to a series of races held Saturday near Detroit that the brand sponsored. That same day, an Ohio man drove a Dodge Challenger into a group of counterpro­testers at a white nationalis­t and supremacis­t rally in Charlottes­ville.

Some of Dodge’s more than 740,000 followers and others on Twitter criticized the brand for keeping the posts up after the violence in Charlottes­ville. Dodge’s delayed response contrasts with TIKI Brand Products and the Detroit Red Wings, which issued statements Saturday distancing themselves from white nationalis­ts who carried tiki torches and signs that altered the hockey team’s logo with swastikas during the rally.

“It seems to me completely tone deaf that they wouldn’t acknowledg­e that it was one of their vehicles that was very clearly identified in the weekend’s events,” Scott Monty, co-managing partner at Brain+Trust Partners, which advises companies on social media use, said before Dodge removed the posts. “Having a hashtag that is so similar or at least related to what happened, you would think they would just eradicate any existence of that.”

Dodge is the lead sponsor of Roadkill, a website, magazine and television show owned by The Enthusiast Network. The brand has sponsored the annual drag races on Michigan’s Woodward Avenue for the last three years.

“It’s unfortunat­e that such a pure, safe, family friendly automotive event was linked to such a senseless, horrific act,” Fiat Chrysler said in an emailed statement.

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