Advertising and Marketing

McDonald's patrons insulted by "Kneeling" ad

JDM050618mcds.jpg

McDonald's is the latest international company to have an advertisement seen as offensive in China. Its latest in-store ad spot, "The Debt Collector", features a kneeling customer, leading viewers in Chengdu to accuse McDonald's of insulting all Chinese consumers.

The script is as follows (translated):

(Outside a music store)
Customer: Just one more week, one week...owner shakes his head Three days' time. Just three days, okay?
Owner: sternly How many times have I told you? Our discount period is over.
Customer: Sir, please, I'm begging you! kneels and grabs at the owner's trouser legs
Voice-over: Luckily McDonald's understands the pain I feel when I miss an opportunity, and it gives me 365 days of discounts.
A McDonald's representative says that the ad is gently satirizing the widespread practice of offering customers discounts that have all sorts of restrictions and limitations.

As in previous ad flaps, people in online forums are calling for boycotts, not having forgotten McDonald's earlier sin of classifying Taiwan as a country. And there's the requisite online survey, offered by NetEase, stuffed as usual.

Maybe the subject matter is just too sensitive. Toyota offended consumers last year in an ad featuring kneeling stone lions. Perhaps advertisers should leave kneeling to crime flicks and overacted romantic dramas.

Links:
- Photo and story from
Chengdu Economic Daily via China Advertising Association (in Chinese)
- Other Danwei posts on offensive ads: Nike, Nippon Paint
 
Danwei Model Workers
laomo2008fpA.jpg
Recommended blogs and new media
China Media Timeline
Major media events over the last three decades
Books on China
Leslie_Chang_Factory_Girls_s.jpg
To die poor is a sin: An excerpt of Factory Girls by Leslie T. Chang.
In Wang Shuo's No Man's Land: Geremie Barme addresses Wang Shuo's 千万别把我当人.
Swimming with Mao, a memoir essay: This memoir piece is by Xujun Eberlein, author of the new short story book Apologies Forthcoming'.
Front Page of the Day
A different newspaper every weekday
From the Vault
Classic Danwei posts
+ Public intellectuals on the road to debauchery? (2004.12): Southern People Weekly gets the authorities in a snit with its feature on Public Intellectuals.
+ Don't ask so laowai don't have to tell (2008.07): An essay was written by Geremie Barmé, scholar, filmmaker and author of the new book The Forbidden City.
+ China's illegal yellow press (2005.05): On the left is the front page of 'Military News', a newspaper without masthead, contact phone number or any kind of publication licence (required by Chinese law). The paper was purchased on the Beijing subway for two yuan, which is relatively expensive, as most of the city's daily newspapers cost only half a yuan.
Danwei Archives
Danwei Feeds
Via Feedsky rsschiclet2.png (on the mainland)
or Feedburner rsschiclet.gif (blocked in China)
rsschiclet2.png rsschiclet.gif Main posts: All main page posts
rsschiclet2.png rsschiclet.gif Top Links: Links from the top bar
rsschiclet2.png rsschiclet.gif Danwei Jobs: Want ads
rsschiclet2.png rsschiclet.gif Danwei Digest: Updated daily, 19:30