The Scotsman

Burger King banned from advertisin­g ‘plant’ Whopper cooked on meat grills

● Watchdog acts on complaints over social media ads

- By TESS DE LA MARE newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Burger King has been banned from advertisin­g its Rebel Whopper as “100 per cent plant based” as it is cooked on the same grill as meat products.

The Advertisin­g Standards Agency (ASA) found Burger King had also failed to make it immediatel­y clear its new product was dressed with an egg-based mayonnaise.

The fast food giant received complaints from consumers criticisin­g the use of the claims “100 per cent Whopper. No Beef” and “plant-based burger” in Burger King’s marketing. The watchdog said in a ruling: “Because the overall impression of the ads was that the burger was suitable for vegans and vegetarian­s when, in fact, it was not, we concluded that the ads were misleading.”

The ASA found the product’s launch had been timed to coincide with the “Veganuary” challenge – making consumers believe it was fully vegan.

The decision was based on three adverts across Twitter and Facebook.

A tweet from the @Burgerking­uk account said: “You asked and we listened. Introducin­g the Rebel Whopper, our first plant-based burger!”

The tweet was accompanie­d by an image of the burger stating “100 per cent Whopper. No beef”.

An almost identical advert appeared on Facebook with the additional claim “powered by the vegetarian butcher” and in small print at the foot “*Product is cooked alongside meat products”. A second Facebook ad stated the Rebel Whopper “tastes of being woke”, had below it the claim “100 per cent whopper. No Beef”, and included the Burger King logo and The Vegetarian Butcher logo

In small print the advert had “T&C’S apply”.

BKUK Group Ltd, the chain’s parent company, said the small print indicated the burger may not be suitable for vegans or vegetarian­s, and that this had been communicat­ed to journalist­s, on social media posts and in dialogue with customers. The group said the product itself consisted of a 100 per cent plant-based patty supplied by the Vegetarian Butcher and that a customer who did not want mayonnaise could exclude it from their order.

The ASA found the qualificat­ion the burger was “cooked alongside meat products” was not sufficient­ly prominent to counter the impression that the burger was suitable for vegetarian­s and vegans.

The agency said the small print did not refer to the presence of egg mayonnaise and was missing from one Facebook advert completely.

It ruled the advert must not appear in its existing form again.

Last year, Burger King was pulled up by the ASA for apparently encouragin­g customers to “milkshake” politician­s.

An Edinburgh Mcdonald’s outlet said it would not be selling milkshakes during Brexit party leader Nigel Farage’s visit for a political rally.

The Burger King account tweeted: “Dear people of Scotland. We’re selling milkshakes all weekend. Have fun. Love BK. #justsaying.”

The fast food chain defended the tweet at the time, calling it a “tongue-in-cheek reaction to recent events”.

The ASA said it had told Burger King the ad must not appear again and “to ensure that its future marketing communicat­ions did not condone or encourage anti-social behaviour”.

“Because the impression was that the burger was suitable for vegans and vegetarian­s when it was not, we concluded that the ads were misleading”

ASA

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 ??  ?? 0 Ads for Burger King’s Rebel Whopper – a plant-based product aimed at vegetarian­s and vegans – have been banned
0 Ads for Burger King’s Rebel Whopper – a plant-based product aimed at vegetarian­s and vegans – have been banned

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