Sponsorship Opinion South Africa

The meme that took a bite out of Apple

Have you heard the one about 'scarf guy'? Or were you too busy posting some of the 1,400 tweets per hour at the start of the #OscarTrial judgment, Thursday?

One of the biggest talking points this past week was the 'Apple scarf guy' - a hapless Apple developer and supplier with an unfortunate fashion sense. He wore what we in South Africa call a 'snood' (dreadful word, sounds rather rude). It's also a pretty awful fashion accessory as accessories go, but he wore his 'infinity scarf' as the Americans call it, in a rather obscure shade of purple too.

Photo via
Photo via Buzzfeed

Clearly the Apple presentation wasn't as riveting as expected, plus technical problems with the live feed meant users were scouting around for other things to focus on. The Apple watch certainly wasn't the futuristic, tech-forward, deal-breaker everyone expected it to be and as attention wandered, scarf guy was there to provide the Twitterati and anyone who thinks they are funny (pretty much everyone on Twitter), with target practice.

Comments ranged from: "I am dressing up as scarf guy for Halloween"; to "Live stream failed, guy wore a huge scarf and the new iPhone is what Galaxy and Samsung had for years. What's the attraction? #iPhone6". And of course there were multiple parody accounts within moments: @KeynoteScarf and @purpleScarfGuy, to name a couple. The way things play out today, Apple scarf guy might get a sponsored fashion makeover, a menswear contract, his own reality TV show.

The UK's Telegraph newspaper ran with a headline, 'Apple launch: who is scarf guy', writing that he stole the show. And they have his profile, which as the founder of a gaming company, probably won't hurt - for his company, Apple not so much. Some of the tweets linked his questionable style with Apple's latest product line: "#ScarfGuy from today's #iPhone6 launch exemplify (sic) how unfashionable Apple products have become"; and "The first coverage I've read about today's Apple unveiling centres around a guy called: #ScarfGuy".

If you were Apple's PR and marketing department or agency or social media community manager, how would you have responded?

The meme that took a bite out of Apple

There's plenty of fodder here for opposing brands too... Mike's Hard Lemonade, a 'premium malt beverage' @mhl tweeted a pic soon after with this tweet: "Really digging #scarfguy's style. #AppleLive #GreatMinds". I would have liked to have seen something clever from Samsung too, which instead focused on the technical differences and glitches in a mild series of YouTube ads after the Apple launch.

The point of all this for brands is that you don't know when something off camera, offside, off cue will strike, or will appeal to the social media masses. Or will overshadow your presentation, press conference, your message. Be prepared for anything and everything.

Source: TRENDAFRiCA.co.za

TRENDAFRiCA is a trend watching portal on consumer insight, research and trends from South Africa and further afield on the continent of Africa. It includes DAiLY trends headlines from around the world, influential Trendspotter columnists and in-depth reports on industry segments. Louise Marsland is the founder and editor.

Go to: www.trendafrica.co.za

About Louise Marsland

Louise Burgers (previously Marsland) is Founder/Content Director: SOURCE Content Marketing Agency. Louise is a Writer, Publisher, Editor, Content Strategist, Content/Media Trainer. She has written about consumer trends, brands, branding, media, marketing and the advertising communications industry in SA and across Africa, for over 20 years, notably, as previous Africa Editor: Bizcommunity.com; Editor: Bizcommunity Media/Marketing SA; Editor-in-Chief: AdVantage magazine; Editor: Marketing Mix magazine; Editor: Progressive Retailing magazine; Editor: BusinessBrief magazine; Editor: FMCG Files newsletter. Web: www.sourceagency.co.za.
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