There will never be a good McDonaldâs slogan
By Elliot Chan, Opinions Editor
Dear McDonaldâs advertising team: no word combination or phrase will ever make your company more appealing. You can use the word âloveâ over and over again, but you donât need to convince us that you love anything. Just keep churning out your delicious mutated meals and youâll be just fine.
In 2003, McDonaldâs unveiled its âIâm lovinâ itâ campaign with vocals by Justin Timberlake. Over a decade later the jingle still resonatesâitâs brilliant; itâs so incredibly stupid. I have not met a person who genuinely âlovesâ the slogan. It just existed to cause us to cringe a little bit, more so than tasting the watered-down 7-Up from a malfunctioning soda fountain.
Then in 2008, McDonaldâs dared to change peopleâs opinion of their food by introducing a new slogan: âWhat weâre made of.â With no cameo from any boy band members, the lacklustre campaign fizzled out and appeared only on packaging and promotional items.
Now, 11 years since we heard the âba-da-ba-ba-da!â brain-branding tune, rumours heard through the Internet grapevine suggest that the behemoth fast-food chain will be introducing its new slogan for 2015. At this moment, the possible slogan appears to be rather âlovinâ beats hatinââ or âlovinâ is greater than hatinâ.â And a synchronized groan can be heard from the 99-billion customers served.
I hope dearly that both those options are in fact just jokes, because the last thing I want McDonaldâs to do is remind me of what I hate and what I love while eating shitty food. Like an unhealthy relationship, McDonaldâs is lying to me. Please, McDonaldâs advertising team, if you are throwing the slogan online to gauge the publicâs reaction, note that it sucks. Donât put us through 10-plus years of âlovinâ beats hatinâââitâs not even clever.
Will I stop going to McDonaldâs because of its crappy slogan? No, but it upsets me that there is a department of people up in the Micky Dâs ivory tower, making such a dumb decision and that this is what McDonaldâs is focussed on at the moment to earn customersâ love and loyalty.
A slogan means nothing, and there will never be one that will inspire me to go and eat McDonaldâs. However, McDonaldâs does many things well: the Monopoly promotion is one of the most successful âgolden ticketâ marketing campaigns of all time and the kid toys are another brilliant payoff for feeding our youths unwholesome food.
It upsets me when I see McDonaldâs try to appeal to an audience that will never be converted. Stop trying to prove yourself to the health freaks and the haters. There is a devoted and large demographic out there that will never stop going to McDonaldâs or other fast-food chains. For many, we have committed to this lifestyle of heart attacks, obesity, and diabetes and we are no more or less unhappy for it. We are fine, we are living our lives, we are just trying to find contentment, and we are the people you should care about.
So, if the advertising team is reading this, understand that whatever slogan you end up agreeing on, weâll always hate it. Donât waste your time and money with such a pointless initiative. Instead, do what you are already doing, treat us better, and stop lying to us. Because to me, McDonaldâs beats nothinâ. Itâs the Taylor Swift of nourishmentâshake it off.