
She added that due to lead times required by broadcasters, the promotion created by the London advertising agency Leo Burnett, would still air on Wednesday. We are particularly sorry that the advert may have disappointed those people who are most important to us: our customers.” “It was never our intention to cause any upset.
MCDONALD'S THERE'S A BIG MAC FOR THAT RADIO COMMERCIAL 2017 TV
The advert will be removed from all media, including TV and cinema, completely and permanently this week. Shame on you! #mcdonalds #badtaste- The Midgers May 14, 2017Ī McDonald’s spokeswoman said: “We can confirm today that we have taken the decision to withdraw our ‘Dad’ TV advert. I lost my father when I was a child and I find the latest McDonald's advert disgusting and offensive. There was also criticism on social media, including from many people who said they had lost a parent during childhood. “We’re carefully assessing the complaints but no decision has been reached on whether there are grounds to launch an investigation.” Some complainants have referenced the proximity to Father’s Day. A spokesman said: “Complainants have objected that it is inappropriate and insensitive to use bereavement and grief to sell fast food. The Advertising Standards Authority said it had received about 100 complaints by Monday, with more coming in. “We have already received countless phone calls this morning, with parents telling us their bereaved children have been upset by the advert and alienated by McDonald’s as a brand that wants to emotionally manipulate its customers.”

“One in 29 children are bereaved of a parent or sibling by the time they are 16 years of age, so this storyline will resonate with a huge number of children and surviving parents. She said: “What have done is exploited childhood bereavement as a way to connect with young people and surviving parents alike – unsuccessfully. Shelley Gilbert, a psychotherapist who founded the children’s bereavement charity Grief Encounter, said it had received a lot of phone calls from concerned parents. His face lights up once they arrive at a McDonald’s and, as he eats a Filet-O-Fish, his mother says: “That was your dad’s favourite too.” As she tells him what his dad was like, the boy looks sad as they do not seem to have much in common. The advert, first screened last week, shows a boy asking his mother about his dead father.

McDonald’s has pulled its new advert from TV screens and apologised for any upset caused after it was accused of exploiting childhood bereavement.
