A Look Back at Six Blatant Backlashes from 2024

A Look Back at Six Blatant Backlashes from 2024


It was the poet John Lydgate who’s believed to have said that you can’t please all people all of the time.

Does it matter that he uttered those words in the 15th century? Not at all. The maxim is as true today as ever. Faced with seemingly intractable problems including climate change, economic disparities, racial inequality and a resurgent cold war, it’s little wonder people feel powerless and angry.

Perhaps that’s why 2024 was a year of blowback—against people and politics, sure, but also against brands and what they claim to stand for. Below, six flashpoints from the last 12 months.

AI swiftly goes too far

Consumers have warily watched AI’s growing influence since the technology began replacing jobs several years ago, but wariness turned to anger in 2024.

It began when deepfake porn images of Taylor Swift jumped from 4Chan to X (formerly Twitter) and Telegram, sending Swifties (and Congress, and the Screen Actors Guild) over the edge. In March, Glasgow’s flimsy Willy Wonka “experience” enraged patrons who showed up expecting a fantasyland—promotional photos of which turned out to have been AI-generated. Accenture data shows that 60% of consumers now doubt the authenticity of things they see online, and AI’s a big reason. A study by Washington State University revealed that the more a product incorporates AI, the less likely consumers were to buy it.

Heck, even the normally tech-friendly audience at SXSW booed ChatGPT chief Peter Deng this year.

He really bowled them over

Consumers stressing over inflation probably don’t expect corporate America to comfort them—but it might be a good idea to at least not insult them.

Apparently, Kellogg’s didn’t get that memo. In February, the food giant’s CEO Gary Pilnick appeared on CNBC and suggested that eating cereal is a good meal plan for cash-strapped Americans. “If you think about the cost of cereal for a family versus what they might otherwise do, that’s going to be much more affordable,” said the chief executive, who took home over $4.4 million in compensation in 2023. Not only was Pilnick’s advice empirically dubious (food bills eat up 11% of American incomes these days), it was—in the view of many—tone deaf. “Is this the new ‘let them eat cake?’” asked on Instagrammer. Said another piqued consumer via TikTok: “I will never buy cereal again. Eat that.”

Diversity takes a hit

After years of embracing diversity (at least on paper), a phalanx of household-name brands including Ford, John Deere, Target and Lowe’s decided to abandon it in 2024, dismissing some of the very ideals they’d trumpeted until recently. After the 2020 murder of George Floyd prompted much c-suite soul searching and resulted in written pledges to increase diversity and equity inclusion, the social pendulum seems to have swung back in a case of fear caused by fear.


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