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Showing posts with label Controversy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Controversy. Show all posts

October 14, 2023

Not Done Make My Trip - Crass advertisement targets Pakistani cricket Supporters


This advertisement is in extremely bad taste. What the heck was the Make My Trip team thinking? Don’t tell me that your advertising team has not seen the proof. Maybe you thought it was pure bar trawl that would go down well with a couple of pegs of whisky. Common sense is not common. Coca-Cola or Pepsi would never commit such a Faux Pas.

Make My Trip is a professional company, and it is releasing such advertisements, and that too on the front page!!! Such a waste of money!!! It is not smart advertising; it is plain stupidity or pure Hara-kiri. Don’t make fun of sportspersons and supporters. Commiserate and say, “Hard luck mate”. Don’t gloat, remain humble and grounded.

Just for a second, let us assume that Pakistani supporters really had booked rooms using the Make My Trip app. Would they be thrilled if Pakistan gets thrashed and they get discounts as promised by Make My Trip?

I bet my bottom dollar they would not appreciate the so-called discount if it came at the cost of their team’s loss. A team that they have spent so much money and effort to come to India and watch an epic cricket month between the traditional rivals. If make my trip was genuine it could have offered a quiet discount with a “we are sorry” note and not made such a song and dance about the defeat. Make My Trip has lost the loyalty of many Pakistani people with such crass promotion.

Many Pakistani YouTubers like Sana Amjad and Sohaib Chaudhary are doing a better job than Make My Trip. Their YouTube videos are quite objective and don’t take the official Pakistani view of viewing India through Xenophobic glasses, Most of the Pakistanis featured in the videos come across as well-mannered people grounded in the present realities.

End of the day, cricket is a sport. Let us treat it as such. Arshad Nadeem of Pakistan and Neeraj Chopra are great friends. In the world athletics Championships held in August Neeraj Chopra won the gold and Nadeem got the Silver but unfortunately there was no Pakistani flag available for Nadeem to drape around him and celebrate.

It was the gracious Neeraj who invited Nadeem to share the Indian flag, and both celebrated together. It brought a lump of happiness to the crores of viewers throughout the world who watched the drama unfold on live television.

I listen to Pakistani podcasts on Spotify and find them interesting. The podcasters are quite knowledgeable, and the Urdu is charming. The discourse about how Pakistan lost Bangladesh not because of India but due to the ill-treatment of East Pakistan by the West was quite an eye-opener.

We need to avoid stereotyping. If Pakistan is not doing well, it could mean big trouble for us. We need stable borders. This advertisement will hurt sentiments. make my trip should eat humble pie and say sorry. We are a hospitable country.

Let us respect our guests. Remember we did not go to Pakistan, but they visited us. Let us understand that it was the muscle of BCCI that made it possible.  We don't need such advertisements. Hyderabadis behaviour was much better. The crowd at Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium supported both Sri Lanka and Pakistan. That is the way forward. Don’t make fun of the vanquished. Let us learn to be graceful. 


December 12, 2012

Controversial Addidas Sneaker (shoe)


Blog Entry: 399


  
The Roundhouse Mid “Handcuff” shoe, created by New York designer Jeremy Scott, features a plastic orange shackle that attaches to each ankle. The sneakers cost $350. It was promoted with a teaser “Tighten up your style with the JS Roundhouse Mids, dropping in August. Got a sneaker game so hot you lock your kicks to your ankles?”

The brand was making a cheeky statement about shoe theft but many are equating these binding devices with slavery and prisoners.

The “Handcuff” sneaker image had over 36,000 Facebook likes, but many of the comments are angry and disapproving.

“Please tell me this is FAKE. I am not hearing these Adidas Amistad Originals,” one woman commented on Facebook, referencing the ship famous for an African slave revolt in 1839.

One man is prepared to boycott the brand out of respect to his African heritage. “I for one will NEVER don another pair of Adidas if these shoes see the light of day in the sneaker market,” he wrote.

One Facebook user reasoned that “corporate business has a social responsibility above all to consider these perceptions before releasing a product like this.”

Another flabbergasted person wondered, “This has to be some sort of prank right?” Others simply called the design “ignorant” and the look “slavewear.”

The sneaker controversy is still on-going with over 2,000 Facebook comments along with many websites and bloggers discussing their unique perspectives.

One commenter wrote on Facebook, “Wow Adidas, you had an opportunity to fix this and you defiantly decided to go the racist route. Good for you. I hope your stock falls off a cliff.”