Tag: marketing

  • As the World Turns and the Burger Bites..  what’s your favorite “product” between two buns?

    As the World Turns and the Burger Bites.. what’s your favorite “product” between two buns?

    Everyone makes jokes about things that are not in their bingo cards for the year, and for all of us, the bingo card did not have fast-food CEOs going on TikTok to take videos of themselves eating their “products.” Not their food, but their products.


    It’s been a week of people mocking and generating memes about the McDonald’s CEO for deciding to make a promotional video for the new Golden Arch sandwich. He awkwardly was on social media taking what was considered by most as a pitifully small bite and being overwhelmed by what he thought was the size of the burger that had sesame seeds—something he was shocked at the inventiveness of.


    The CEO in question is Chris Kempczinski, who has run McDonald’s since 2019. The promotional clip that circulated online quickly drew ridicule across TikTok and other platforms, with viewers pointing out how awkward the moment felt.

    The bite itself became the focus of thousands of reactions, memes, and stitched videos, with people questioning whether the CEO actually eats the company’s food regularly. Instead of creating excitement around the sandwich, the clip seemed to spark a wave of parody content that spread across social media for days. But he loved those crispy onions..


    A separate video of him eating a chicken sandwich has people joking that he was actually putting the napkin up to his mouth in order to spit it out.


    After the video was widely mocked, Burger King, Wendy’s, and Taco Bell—and everyone else in between—went online to do similar videos but, because of the other response, took larger bites of the product.
    And that was the week. That was a week of social media, at least. People making mixes of the video, songs about the video, re-videoing the video, commenting on the video, all at the expense of the McDonald’s CEO.


    Listen, anyone who follows conspiracy theories will know one of the most common conspiracy theories that has been active online recently is this thought—albeit gross—that fast-food joints don’t have enough cows to use in their products and are getting medical waste and other forms of ingredients that are less than edible.


    It all seems silly and far-fetched until, of course, you see the CEO slam his teeth into a very small portion of a product that he won’t call food and promote that on social media.


    Bad buzz. Bad advertising. Strange blowback.


    That’s your week in socials.

  • We know what you marketed this summer

    We know what you marketed this summer

    Sony Pictures has been freaking people out.

    Over the July 4th weekend, beachgoers and internet sleuths alike were buzzing as eerie images began circulating online—especially on TikTok—of a mysterious figure wandering around Santa Monica and other California beaches. The figure in question? A tall person in a long overcoat, floppy hat, and yes, a hook for a hand.


    If you’re getting I Know What You Did Last Summer vibes, you’re not alone. This lookalike of the iconic slasher from the original ’90s flick has stirred up enough social media panic to rival a real crime wave. But here’s the catch (pun intended): there’s been no actual crime reported. No attacks. No missing persons. No blood-soaked sand. Just a lot of hype—and a lot of speculation.

    @gd60702 Someone dressed up as the fisherman for I know what you did last summer and chased people around. #IKnowWhatYouDidLastSummer #Movie #FilmingTVCompetition #Drama #ForYou ♬ Suspense, horror, piano and music box – takaya



    And that speculation leads us to what seems like the most likely answer: marketing.

    Sony’s remake of I Know What You Did Last Summer drops July 18th, and this beachside boogeyman feels like a viral stunt straight from the studio’s playbook. If so, well played. It worked. People are talking, videos are trending, and the hook is back in the spotlight.

    But marketing stunts like this walk a fine line. They’re fun… until they’re not. In this case, no one has been hurt (as far as we know), and the buzz has only amplified awareness for a franchise that’s already been rebooted, remade, and revisited several times over.

    So will this version finally hook a new generation? Or are we all just too jaded to care?

    In case you wanted to forget, here are the ‘I still know I know I want to know and I didn’t know” film names thus far. Maybe it just FELT like there were more than there really were?

    I Know What You Did Last SummerOctober 17, 1997
    I Still Know What You Did Last SummerNovember 13, 1998
    I’ll Always Know What You Did Last SummerAugust 15, 2006
    I Know What You Did Last SummerJuly 18, 2025THE NEW ONE!



    In the end, the question becomes how many times can we remember what we did last summer… before we just stop caring?