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Consumers Call For Big Changes in Advertising

Model Kendall Jenner appears in a still from a controversial advertisement for Pepsi, which the company pulled after widespread criticism of the ad's content. (Pepsi)
Model Kendall Jenner appears in a still from a controversial advertisement for Pepsi, which the company pulled after widespread criticism of the ad's content. (Pepsi)

From Bill O’Reilly to Kendall Jenner’s Pepsi ad, advertisers are taking heat and responding. We’ll look at the new consumer power over advertisers.

Pepsi put out a goofy ad with Kendall Jenner handing out Pepsi at a protest rally, and the Twittersphere went nuts. That ad was toast. Bill O’Reilly was revealed to have spent millions settling sexual harassment allegations, and more than 50 advertisers pulled their ads within days. They didn’t want to face public backlash. Social media networks have given consumers superpowers. New clout they are using. This hour On Point, the fast and furious consumer outrage dynamic pumping up the politics of advertising. — Tom Ashbrook

Guests

David Griner, digital managing editor of Adweek, where he leads news coverage. (@griner)

Allen Adamson, founder of the BrandSimple consulting firm. Former chairman of Landor Associates, a global brand consulting and design firm. (@adamsona)

Lucy Atkinson, associate professor at the University of Texas at Austin School of Advertising and Public Relations.  (@lucyatkinson)

Rashad Robinson, executive director of Color of Change, an online racial justice organization. (@rashadrobinson)

From Tom’s Reading List

Adweek: How Pepsi Got It So Wrong: Unpacking One of the Most Reviled Ads in Recent Memory — “Since the moment Pepsi released its new two-and-a-half minute spot—featuring Kendall Jenner, protesters and a message of unity via soda—response to the ad has been anything but positive.”

New York Times: As Anger at O’Reilly Builds, Activists Use Social Media to Prod Advertisers — “Ad boycotts are not new: provocateurs like Don Imus and Glenn Beck lost their cable news soapboxes in part because an angry public used petitions and letter-writing campaigns to force companies to drop their sponsorship. But the pile-on culture of social media has accelerated the process to such a degree that corporations may find themselves besieged in hours by tens of thousands of online critics.”

CNN Money: Few ads run on ‘O’Reilly Factor’ as boycott takes effect — “Before he cut to his first commercial break of the night on Thursday, Fox News host Bill O’Reilly teased a series of segments that would come, he said, ‘after these messages.’ But after only a one minute-long ad, O’Reilly was back on the screen. The lone commercial to air during that break — from the life insurance company Coventry Direct — was one of only seven spots to run during Thursday’s edition of ‘The O’Reilly Factor,’ providing tangible evidence that a widening advertising boycott against the top-rated program has taken effect.”

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