Dodge keeps ‘tone deaf’ roadkill posts up after protester death
Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV’s Dodge brand is taking flak on social media for keeping up posts promoting drag races that took place the same day the driver of one of its vehicles killed a protester and injured at least 19 others in Charlottesville, Virginia.
The last four posts by Dodge’s Twitter account include the hashtag #RoadkillNights, referring to a series of races held Saturday near Detroit that the brand sponsored. That same day, an Ohio man drove a Dodge Challenger into a group of counter protesters at a white nationalist and supremacist rally in Charlottesville.
Some of Dodge’s more than 740,000 followers and others on Twitter criticized the brand for keeping the posts up three days after the violence in Charlottesville. Dodge’s lack of response contrasts with TIKI Brand Products and the Detroit Red Wings, which issued statements Saturday distancing themselves from white nationalists who carried tiki torches and signs that altered the hockey team’s logo with swastikas during the rally.
“It seems to me completely tone deaf that they wouldn’t acknowledge that it was one of their vehicles that was very clearly identified in the weekend’s events,” said Scott Monty, co-managing partner at Brain+Trust Partners, which advises companies on social media use. “Having a hashtag that is so similar or at least related to what happened, you would think they would just eradicate any existence of that.”
Dodge is the lead sponsor of Roadkill, a website, magazine and television show owned by The Enthusiast Network. The brand has sponsored the annual drag races on Michigan’s Woodward Avenue for the last three years.
“It’s unfortunate that such a pure, safe, family friendly automotive event was linked to such a senseless, horrific act,” Fiat Chrysler said in an emailed statement.
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Roadkill on Monday posted a statement to its Facebook page condemning “the violence committed and racism displayed in Charlottesville.”
“We’ve seen over the last 24 hours three CEOs quit the American manufacturing council that the president put together,” said Monty, who led Ford Motor Co.’s social-media strategy from 2008 to 2014. “That all says something. And Dodge’s action or inaction says something as well.”