Bangkok Post

Netizens mock new moniker of McDonald’s

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BEIJING: McDonald’s China provoked snorts of laughter yesterday, as internet users mocked a hamfisted new company name that sounds a lot like the Chinese word for a pig eating.

Earlier this month, the company quietly changed its official name from a transliter­ation of “McDonald’s” to a new moniker meaning “Golden Arches” — a reference to the business’s famous logo.

It was an under-the-radar decision only intended for official use, not for restaurant­s, the company said in a statement.

But the move threatened to turn into something of a PR nightmare after an enterprisi­ng internet user uncovered the change in corporate filings.

Social media wags quickly pointed out the word — gong — sounds similar to one that describes a pig snorting and digging in the dirt for food, or “rooting” in English.

It was an unfortunat­e associatio­n for a restaurant that has long sought to dissociate itself from unhealthy eating habits.

By early afternoon, the hashtag “Golden Arches” had been viewed two million times, with many commenters hamming up its porcine associatio­ns.

“Thank you for ‘snorting’,” one user named “bundled meat” wrote on Weibo, a play on the words McDonald’s servers often use to welcome customers.

“Pig snort snort, golden snort snort, if it’s tasty come snort again,” wrote another user.

Picking a Chinese name can be difficult for foreign corporatio­ns. Airbnb’s Chinese name “Aibiying” meaning “welcome each other with love” has not gone over well with Chinese for its phonetic clunkiness.

Max Factor, the cosmetics company, chose a name that to some Chinese sounds like “a Buddha wrapped in honey.”

Coca-Cola is one company that got it right, transliter­ating its English name to “kekou kele” meaning “Happiness you can taste.”

A McDonald’s China spokeswoma­n said in a statement yesterday that the company’s new name “is purely a formality.’’

“The company’s name is only for registrati­on purposes,” the statement said. “It will have no effect on normal business operations.”

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