Did Boaty McBoatface teach us nothing?
Don’t put your faith in the Internet – they will let you down and then spread it all over social media for further humiliation.
So, maybe McDonald’s New Zealand should have thought this one through a little more before making it public.
It all started out innocently enough: in honour of their new in-store touch screens, Maccy’s decided to run an online contest where New Zealanders could build and name their own burgers. Then they submit their custom burgers to the McDonald’s New Zealand website to vote on the best ones.
They could also generate a QR code which would allow them to go along to any restaurant and get their burger made, TIME reports. Sounds fun, right? No.
Sometime on Wednesday, things started to fall apart.
Politics aside, McDonalds had a "design your own burger!" competition and it went exactly as well as you think: pic.twitter.com/3K8CrJT2RH
— Clee (@jmsclee) July 21, 2016
[tweet https://twitter.com/deer_ful/status/756130855089606657/ conversation=”false”]
McDonalds in NZ let the internet name their own burgers… whoops:https://t.co/ZJHTyxsEOy
– @IsTylerJordan pic.twitter.com/ymvoe9sjyf
— KiSS 91.7 (@KiSSedmonton) July 22, 2016
McDonald's Let People Design Their Own Burgers, and the Internet Shat All Over Ithttps://t.co/y2Sijtr6Pv pic.twitter.com/vD3RdpxbJc
— theCHIVE (@theCHIVE) July 21, 2016
I'm dying pic.twitter.com/wpR7y1pWNb
— Lance McDonald (@manfightdragon) July 21, 2016
McDonalds Let the Internet Create Their Own Burgers and Guess What Happened https://t.co/gJQYoYep1G via @Dorkly
— Matt Dawson (@SaintRPh) July 22, 2016
And because the Internet is an unsavoury place, people started making racist and downright inappropriate burger suggestions, so McDonald’s had to pull the competition.
Now, if you click on the link, it just redirects you back to the home page.
This is why you don’t ask the Internet for anything.