ECONOMY & WORK
MONEY 101
NEWS
PERSONAL FINANCE
NET WORTH
About Us Contact Us Privacy Policy Terms of Use DMCA Opt-out of personalized ads
© Copyright 2023 Market Realist. Market Realist is a registered trademark. All Rights Reserved. People may receive compensation for some links to products and services on this website. Offers may be subject to change without notice.
MARKETREALIST.COM / ECONOMY & WORK

McDonald’s ad featuring its CEO backfires spectacularly as rivals waste no time roasting it

The likes of Subway, Burger King, and Wendy's all joined in on the action.
PUBLISHED MAR 5, 2026
People eating at a McDonald's. (Cover Image Source: Getty Images | (Photo by John van Hasselt)
People eating at a McDonald's. (Cover Image Source: Getty Images | (Photo by John van Hasselt)

Not every advertisement can hit the mark, and that is what McDonald’s recently found out. As a promotion for its new release in America, the Big Arch, Company CEO Chris Kempczinski did a taste test and released the video on his official Instagram handle. However, the reactions were not what either he or the company expected, and things got so bad that even competitors began roasting the video.

A McDonald's fast food restaurant in downtown San Antonio | Getty Images | Photo by Robert Alexander
A McDonald's fast food restaurant in downtown San Antonio | Getty Images | Photo by Robert Alexander

This promotional tactic failed spectacularly because Kempczinski hyped up the burger and then took the smallest possible bite out of it. “I love this product. It is so good,” he said, as he touted the sesame seed-laden bun and a special sauce that the company had made for this burger. To be fair to the CEO, it was quite a big burger, but the bite he took out of it was still very small.

Image Source: Motorists queue to use the Drive Thru hatch of the fast food restaurant McDonald's,| Photo by Matt Cardy | Getty Images
Motorists queue to use the drive-thru hatch of McDonald's | Photo by Matt Cardy | Getty Images

Kempczinski also said that it was going to be his lunch. “Oh, there’s so much going on with this,” he quipped. “I don’t even know how to attack it, it’s got so much to it!” He then took his tiny bite of the burger before making a rather frivolous claim. “Big bite for a Big Arch,” he exclaimed. Users may think that the burger looked appetizing, but everyone was confused by the small bite.

McDonald's cheeseburger | Getty Images | Matt Cardy
McDonald's cheeseburger | Getty Images | Matt Cardy

Even McDonald’s competitors joined in on the fun, with Burger King UK commenting, “We couldn’t finish it either,” while Subway Singapore added, “We have something fresher you can bite into.” Similarly, a comment by Wendy's official handle read, “Lots to unpack here,” while Wingstop Canada's Instagram handle asked, “Is the big bite in the room with us?”  All in all, the competitors had a field day making fun of a rather ridiculous promotional video.

This is not the first time McDonald’s has been in soup over an ad. During the holiday season last year, the brand put out an ad that was completely generated using artificial intelligence. The ad was meant to capture the joy and cheer of Christmas, but instead, it angered fans, who criticized the company for using AI rather than paying actors for a proper holiday advertisement.

Franchise Pexels | By Franchise
A McDonald's store. (Pexels | By Franchise)

The company released a 45-second ad that was made for its Netherlands division by the ad agency TBWA\Neboko. Some viewers felt that the video did not even look good, and most blamed grotesque characters, horrible color grading, and hackneyed AI approximations of basic physics. People were also left overwhelmed by the extremely quick scene changes that were too much to process.

Representative image of a McDonald's drive through sign (Photo by Jurij Kenda on Unsplash)
Representative image of a McDonald's drive-through sign (Photo by Jurij Kenda on Unsplash)

“For seven weeks, we hardly slept, with up to 10 of our in-house AI and post specialists at The Gardening Club [our in-house AI engine] working in lockstep with the directors,” the CEO of Sweetshop, the agency that made the ad, wrote, before adding, “I don’t see this spot as a novelty or a cute seasonal experiment. To me, it’s evidence of something much bigger: that when craft and technology meet with intention, they can create work that feels genuinely cinematic. So no – AI didn’t make this film. We did.”

More on Market Realist

Popular fast food chain is hiking prices again and still confident about customer loyalty

Chick-fil-A keeps winning over customers despite silently increasing prices by 55% since 2012

Beloved American diner chain to shut down almost 150 outlets nationwide very soon

RELATED TOPICS BURGER KING MCDONALD'S
MORE ON MARKET REALIST
A Michigan couple’s viral membership photo struck a chord online as shoppers shared decades-old stories featuring their kids and even pets.
Mar 16, 2026
A shift to electronic payments is slowing refunds for some filers, even as the IRS grapples with staffing cuts and a heavy tax season workload.
Mar 16, 2026
The warehouse retailer is urging customers not to consume these ready-to-eat meals sold earlier this month
Mar 16, 2026
The product was distributed in several but no illness has yet been reported.
Mar 14, 2026
While most people disagreed with what the mall did, there were some who understood the reason.
Mar 14, 2026
People are seemingly having a hard time saving apart from their retirement funds.
Mar 14, 2026
“These people are working and contributing and helping to reduce the debt and deficit,” an economic expert said.
Mar 14, 2026
As per a provision in US laws, the IRS had no right to levy penalties in the pandemic years.
Mar 14, 2026
The US had sanctioned Russia heavily over its military exercise in Ukraine.
Mar 14, 2026
While gas prices have jumped, diesel prices have skyrocketed across the country, averaging at $4.78
Mar 13, 2026
Last year, Buffett stepped down as the CEO of Berkshire Hathaway.
Mar 13, 2026
Many who feel financially behind are embracing “financial nihilism,” placing bets on high-risk options instead of traditional investing.
Mar 13, 2026
It was one of the rarest instances in the show in which a contestant had won two cars in one episode
Mar 13, 2026
Housing search data flags a shift in buyer sentiment as Californians look beyond Las Vegas for cheaper housing.
Mar 13, 2026
The company is doing whatever it can to stay ahead of its competitors in the field of AI.
Mar 13, 2026
Industry leaders warn that the Iran conflict could push fertilizer costs higher and eventually drive food inflation.
Mar 13, 2026
This could lead to domestic migration of the wealthy from the state before the law takes effect
Mar 13, 2026
Karoline Leavitt says it won’t affect married women, but critics argue name-change documentation could create new barriers.
Mar 13, 2026
As regulators tighten rules and refineries shut down, the Golden State, also known as the ‘fuel island’, grapples with extremely high gas prices.
Mar 12, 2026
The answer isn't clear yet, but early signs point to his policy backfiring in a bad way.
Mar 12, 2026