
A campaign by RB brand Dettol has come under scrutiny online for its depiction of returning to the office as lockdown measures continue to ease.
Created by McCann, the ad attempts to detail aspects of office life that the public may be missing while working at home, including 鈥減utting on a tie鈥, 鈥渢he boss's jokes鈥 and 鈥減roper bants鈥.
Dettol鈥檚 outdoor ad continues by encouraging workers to 鈥渄isinfect surfaces we use throughout the day, so we can do it all again tomorrow鈥.
Noooooooo there鈥檚 another one WHYYYYYYYYYYYY
鈥 Jenny se quois (@mmtowns)
The ad 鈥 which has been seen at London Underground stations including Euston and Camden Town 鈥 quickly garnered strong reactions from commuters for describing the return to the office as 鈥渟eeing your second family鈥.
However, some images posted on Twitter did not include Dettol鈥檚 logo, leaving many to assume the ad was part of the government鈥檚 upcoming campaign encouraging people to return to the office.
For everyone retweeting this, you may be interested to know it鈥檚 an ad for Dettol, whose manufacturer Reckitt Benckiser said just four weeks ago it was 鈥渢oo early to say鈥 when its own staff would go back to the office
鈥 Tom Hourigan (@TomHourigan)
The government鈥檚 campaign, which was set to launch tomorrow (4 September), has reportedly been delayed until next week at the earliest, amid claims that social-distancing guidelines have prevented companies from returning to their workplaces.
This afternoon, however, the Prime Minister's spokesman claimed that "there has never been a 'back to work' campaign" and that what the government has actually been planning was a "press partnership campaign with regional and local media... on a variety of topics to do with the coronavirus response".
One quick-witted Twitter user took it upon themselves to create a parody of the Dettol ad, which depicts 鈥渢he fear of going back to the office鈥, 鈥渢he extortionate costs of tube travel and commuting in general鈥, and 鈥渢he great oblivion circling life, death鈥.
鈥 Sheriff Babble (@Babble___)Not sure about these new tube adverts
Trainspotting author Irvine Welsh was also quick to join the banter by sharing the post alongside the caption "choose death" 鈥 a riff on his novel's popular opening monologue.
北京赛车pk10 has contacted RB and McCann, but both were yet to respond at the time of publication.