Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Why Do Businesses Not Realize the Tastelessness Before they Put up the Bullboard?

If you read message boards, whether sports or political, you'll always find references to someone "drinking the Kool-aid."

Perhaps it was this constant use on message boards that caused the advertisers of an Indiana restaurant to think that no one would be offended by a reference to the Jonestown suicide massacre.

Billboard Comes Down After Outcry Over Jonestown Reference
You know what puts me in the mood for Mexican food? References to '70s suicide cults. I must be the only one, though, because an Indiana restaurant chain ended a billboard campaign after complaints about its Jonestown theme. "We're like a cult, with better Kool-Aid," the billboards read. "To die for!"

The reference, of course, is to the 1978 mass suicide at the Peoples Temple Agricultural Project in Guyana, better known as Jonestown: a cult that began in Indiana. More than nine hundred people, including children, died of cyanide poisoning: the poison was mixed into vats of Flavor-Aid, a drink similar to Kool-Aid.

"[W]e are not getting the reaction we expected," a company executive told the South Bend Tribune. "It went the wrong direction, hit a nerve, and we have come to realize we should not have done this billboard. We lose the core message."

Cory, the tipster who sent this in to Consumerist, noted, "This was over 30 years ago and I kind of like the billboard." What do you think?

Consumerist (from whom the link above comes) has a poll - 60% of respondants don't think it's offensive at all. (But it has only 763 total votes.)

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