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Advertising Businesses Space

Pepsi Drops Plans To Use Artificial Constellation To Promote An Energy Drink (spacenews.com) 85

Just days after Pepsi announced that it would advertise its products in space using a Russian startup, the company now says it will no longer pursue the plans, avoiding what likely would have resulted in significant public criticism. Slashdot reader schwit1 shares a report from SpaceNews: The publication Futurism reported April 13 that PepsiCo's Russian subsidiary was working with a startup there called StartRocket to advertise an energy drink called "Adrenaline Rush" using satellites. The company has proposed flying a set of small satellites in formation, reflecting sunlight with Mylar sails to create logos or other advertising messages visible from the ground after sunset and before sunrise.

PepsiCo's headquarters in the United States has shot down the idea. "We can confirm StartRocket performed an exploratory test for stratosphere advertisements using the Adrenaline GameChangers logo," a company spokesperson told SpaceNews April 15. "This was a one-time event; we have no further plans to test or commercially use this technology at this time." The company didn't elaborate on the "exploratory test for stratosphere advertisements," but it appears to refer to a high-altitude balloon test of the technology that StartRocket says on its website it planned to carry out in April in cooperation with Russia's Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology, or Skoltech.
"People have a visceral dislike of space-based advertising," adds schwit1.
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Pepsi Drops Plans To Use Artificial Constellation To Promote An Energy Drink

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  • We did it! (Score:4, Funny)

    by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Wednesday April 17, 2019 @05:55PM (#58451516) Homepage Journal

    All of our complaining worked! Now let's go celebrate with a nice cold Pepsi!

  • by Anonymous Coward

    "Hey look!! We're So Responsive We Dropped The Idea!!"

    Yay Pepsi. Sorta like someone offers to poop on your living room carpet, then says they must be awesome people because they didn't when you asked them not to.

    Yay Pepsi. Or something.

    • To be fair to the maligned megacorp, they said none of that, you were the one who said it all. They released a simple purely factual statement about their decision, in response to inquiries. They did not launch a new advertising campaign about their responsible choices or make any attempt to turn their decision into a marketing technique.

  • by ruddk ( 5153113 ) on Wednesday April 17, 2019 @05:57PM (#58451530)

    with daily ads.

    I suppose it is better than Project A119(detonating a nuclear bomb on the Moon).

    • How exactly? How does a momentary burst of dust and radiaton on a radiation-soaked ball of dust and rock, with scientific and military applications, compare to a long-lived contamination of the beauty of the night sky?

      Yeah "nuclear bad" and all that, but the moon makes the worst badlands we test them on here look like verdant paradises in comparison - and here the fallout reaches everywhere in the world.

    • Huh? Why is better? The nuclear bomb would have no lasting impacts and be minor compared to the endless barrage of of meteors that strike the surface. Hell NASA live streamed the event happening naturally https://www.space.com/43075-bl... [space.com] during the last luna eclipse. Now admittedly it was only 1/3rd of the size of Project A119 but it also didn't leave any notable mark on the moon, unlike the other many thousands of times the same thing has happened on a bigger scale.

      You didn't even know this happened did y

  • A total waste of resources for something that is unhealthy anyway.

    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      It would have been public vandalism of the right of every person to enjoy a view of the milky way and they would have be subject to an extremely damaging global class action suit.

      America, everyone loves looking from the coast out to see, why don't you show the world what proper seppos you are and put billboards at the waterline, claim it is for the safety of children they can grab hold of them if they are drowning, profits right there but of course only on peasant, 'er', public beaches, definitely not in f

  • by Actually, I do RTFA ( 1058596 ) on Wednesday April 17, 2019 @06:05PM (#58451562)

    Pepsi gets ads for "considering" space ads. Pepsi gets ads for "withdrawing" space ads. Pepsi gets several news cycles for cheap. Don't fall for the obviously false narrative.

    • Right; perhaps they learned it watching the New Coke [wikipedia.org] campaign.
    • by Dan East ( 318230 ) on Wednesday April 17, 2019 @07:10PM (#58451764) Journal

      Right, because now that people have heard of "Pepsi" they will go out and buy one, since, you know, they never heard of Pepsi before.

      • Right, because now that people have heard of "Pepsi" they will go out and buy one, since, you know, they never heard of Pepsi before.

        So what is this "Pepsi" then? Do I have to buy one to find out or will an explanation do?

    • In related news, Coca Cola announces its regret at PepsiCo's decision and urges that the advertising technology proposed by Pepsi be fully developed. A spokesperson noted "It would be great for business!" It is unclear which company's business would benefit the most.....
    • I fully believe that Pepsi would rather nobody had heard of the idea in the first place. They don't need an article mentioning them to remind people that they exist, and they don't want their brand associated with destroying the night sky. Articles like this tell people that they explored something horrible, so it does not work in their favor even though they've dropped it... only less in their disfavor than if they hadn't.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      I'm more inclined to go with incompetence. Their Superbowl ad was also widely panned.

      They are certainly no Nike or Gillette, carefully pissing off a small but vocal minority while gaining support from everyone else in the backlash.

  • by Rosco P. Coltrane ( 209368 ) on Wednesday April 17, 2019 @06:23PM (#58451612)

    People have a visceral dislike of space-based advertising," adds schwit1.

    No, people have a visceral dislike of ANY advertising - and the more obnoxious and unavoidable, the more they hate it.

    In a way, I wish Pepsi had gone through with their stupid plan: it might have provoked a real backlash against the ubiquitous brain pollution that is advertising. People bear with it because of things like Adblock on the internet, fast-forward on TV boxes, and looking the other way on the road. But there's no avoiding a disfigured night sky.

    • Still trying to understand why the superbowl (er superb owl) gets a pass on this.

      • by skam240 ( 789197 )

        You're obviously referring to something but I have no idea what. Please tell me you aren't referring to some niche super bowl commercial without explaining yourself.

        • the term 'super bowl' is apparently under copyright. So when Colbert was talking about a few years back, he referred to it as 'superb owl'

    • In a way, I wish Pepsi had gone through with their stupid plan: it might have provoked a real backlash against the ubiquitous brain pollution that is advertising.

      It would have been fun, for every 3rd world country with a rocket program trying to make the big leagues with some anti-satellite antics, to start taking shots at it.

    • Mostly we tolerate it because it funds things we want. We like TV shows and websites enough to put up with the intrusion. A sign floating in space pays for nothing.
    • No, people have a visceral dislike of ANY advertising - and the more obnoxious and unavoidable, the more they hate it.

      Parse error. Circular logic. (True) != (True under certain circumstances)

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Well sure, but not in our dreams! Only on tv and radio...and in magazines...and movies. And at ball games, on buses, and milk cartons, and t-shirts, and bananas, and written on the sky. But not in dreams! No sirree.

  • by pefisher ( 774697 ) on Wednesday April 17, 2019 @09:39PM (#58452226)
    It has become standard procedure for Indulgence seeking corporations to make a contribution to a charity that epitomizes the principal to which they are now committed. I suggest Pepsi might want to give the International Dark-Sky Society the same amount of money they paid for the balloon "demonstration" they don't plan to repeat. I was just trying to think of a way to reduce the nagging feeling that I still need to forgo that cool, wet, sparkling Pepsi taste.
  • Life imitates art, mostly 'cos companies are lazy and steal ideas no matter how nuts they are. Red Dwarf, the books not the show, the reason Kryten is really where he is was because of the leading cola company was sending stars super-nova in order to write a slogan across the sky that would be seen night and day. I bet Naylor is pissing himself laughing at this story.
  • It would be truly tragic if they launched these satellites and someone were able to brick them, hack them to display a space dick, or send them burning into the atmosphere.

Put your Nose to the Grindstone! -- Amalgamated Plastic Surgeons and Toolmakers, Ltd.

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