Was checking my email today and saw the following message from my mother:
Having worked at Crispin this summer and having seen the amount of publicity generated and Whoppers sold due to stunts like Whopper Freakout, I am obviously biased about the Whopper Virgins campaign.
I like it.
I like the bigness of it, the originality of it, the novelty of taking an ancient idea like blind taste-testing and putting a new, 21st Century, Third World, literal spin on the entire thing.
Say what you want about how this video mocks impoverished people, strange diets and foreign cultures, but I don't believe it does. Despite what people around the industry and around the country are saying, I think most people are overlooking how interesting the campaign is, and instead feel it's their duty to point out false prejudices.
The very fact that people are talking about it in the first place is something that CPB strives for with almost every single thing they do. But this leads to an intriguing question:
Is all publicity, even negative, a good thing?
Needless to say, I satisfied one of my two-Whopper-indulgences-per-year directly after viewing it the other night.
Much better than seal meat.
dubs. out.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
1 comment:
Hey, I have an idea. How about we give these natives some firewater and see what they think?
Post a Comment