Yesterday, McDonald’s launched its latest attempt to salvage its relevance among millennials by revamping its classic character, the Hamburglar, transforming him from the rosy-cheeked cartoon ’90s kids knew into a real, live man.
McDonald’s has had a rough start to 2015. CEO Don Thompson announced his resignation in late January. Domestic same-store sales are down 4 percent. Multiple reshuffles and layoffs across marketing and other departments have left a company with a significant image problem struggling to communicate their value to a generation that regards their burgers as unhealthy.
So, a few hours in, has McDonald’s relaunch been all sizzle, no steak?
Opinion is divided — not everyone is lovin’ it — but at least the jokes are coming on strong:
What idiot called this guy The Hamburglar and not Mumford and Buns pic.twitter.com/51sNKyHbRl
— Eliza Bayne (@ElizaBayne) May 6, 2015
The new #Hamburglar: The return of a beloved children’s fast food icon or worst stripper costume ever? pic.twitter.com/MuWVxLq6OU — Bethany Miller (@bethanynmiller) May 6, 2015
This new hamburglar looks like he only steals from whole foods. #Hamburglar #McDonalds
— ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ (@OmahaHostage) May 6, 2015
for a second i thought that the new hamburglar was rocking the yeezy red octobers pic.twitter.com/3D17u8PeXl
— Gary He (@garyhe) May 6, 2015
THE NEW HAMBURGLAR SHOULD NOT LOOK LIKE HE IRONICALLY ENJOYS HAMBURGERS pic.twitter.com/okkLbvHBZy
— Brian Gaar (@briangaar) May 6, 2015
All in all, it’s not an egregious backfire — if you believe there’s no such thing as a bad tweet.
However, the clash of tones — is Hamburglar 2.0 a hot dad or playground creeper? — leaves the brand message unclear: In the TV spot, the Hamburglar is a suburb-dwelling father with a wife, tween son and secret identity. In the promotional images, the Hamburglar wears stylish kicks, slouchy pants and sports facial scruff — more urban-living single dude than burger-grilling dad.
If the social impact is anything to go by, this could be a win for the company in spite of itself. In the longterm though, it could have been an excellent opportunity to resurrect the Hamburglar as millennials actually knew him: one-toothed, cheeky, fun, and above all, an ageless cartoon.
More in Marketing
High stakes, big budgets: How brands are navigating a massive sports year
Global ad spend on sports has increased, and brands like Grey Goose, John Deere and Lavazza coffee brand are investing.
Amazon to issue 3.5% surcharge on fulfillment services as fuel, logistics costs rise
The surcharge will apply to Fulfillment by Amazon in the U.S. and Canada, as well as some cross-border and Buy With Prime services.
Fenty Beauty launches WhatsApp AI advisor as messaging becomes beauty’s next commerce channel
The experience allows users to chat directly with the brand in Whatsapp to get product recommendations, tutorials and reviews.