Coq Roq Coq Roq, also stylized as
COQ ROQ, was an advertising program created in late 2004 for
Burger King by the Miami-based advertising firm
Crispin Porter + Bogusky (CP+B). Coq Roq was a fictional "rooster metal" group (albeit composed of various real-life musicians) with its own website and associated content. The band's musical "style" was classified as punk-sounding
rock n' roll,
thrash or
nu metal. The campaign featured a
viral marketing website, television and print campaigns and a fictional
MySpace page. The program was similar to other marketing campaigns created by CP+B for Burger King, including the
Subservient Chicken,
Ugoff, and
Sith Sense.
Members • Fowl Mouth:
vocals • The Talisman:
lead guitar To start off the promotion, the company announced the forthcoming reintroduction a few weeks before the product was set to be released with the simple tweet "You asked. We answered. ChickenFriesAreBack." The company also expanded its social media footprint specifically for the Chicken Fries promotion, adding new Tumblr and Snapchat accounts to their stable of social media outlets. The idea behind the large social media push was monetary, instead of spending capital on a traditional multi-week, multi-media advertising campaign the company would have product-loyalists spread the word at a fraction of the cost of traditional advertising. Instead of producing a new series of spots on the television front, the chain reused the commercials originally produced by Crispin, Porter + Bogusky from the initial product run. The entire 2014 Chicken Fries promotion represented a major shift in the attitude towards advertising for Burger King, moving from a more traditional advertising structure to one focused almost entirely on digitally based media. This change happened fairly quickly, falling into place over the twelve to eighteen-month period preceding the reintroduction of Chicken Fries to the chain's menu. Along with the new advertising firm, a new director of
digital marketing and social media was newly hired from cosmetics firm
L'Oréal was added, increasing the clout of the digital advertising team within the chain. In the host city of
Indianapolis, Burger King sponsored Chicken Fries-branded
SUVs that would give free rides to visitors. A series of advertisements for the product and the company's 2 for $5 sandwich promotion ran during the tournament featuring the hash tag WatchLikeaKing, along with a series of NCAA co-branded kid's meals. On the digital front, the company utilized a viral marketing strategy starring a chicken named Gloria. Gloria would be brought to local restaurants to decide if the particular location would sell Chicken Fries that day; she would be given two feed bowls labeled "yes" and "no" and depending on which bowl she ate from would decide if the product would be sold there that day. Gloria the chicken had her own truck with her own custom-designed coop. There was a social media presence accompanying the tour with the hashtags RandomGloria and ChickenFries. Additionally, each of the events were
live streamed on the product's webpage, which also included other things such as Gloria's biography, a map of upcoming events and links to corporate web sites. The Gloria tour did raise the ire of animal rights organization
PETA. The group initially responded to the promotion with a one-word tweet, "DESPICABLE," with the follow-up "@BurgerKing forcing a chicken to decide if her friends will become #ChickenFries." PETA stated that the concept behind the tour made their jaws drop over perceived cruelty.
Controversies Sexual innuendo The CP+B produced Coq Roq advertisements followed a pattern of controversy for the company, as previous advertisements produced by CP+B had come under fire for perceived or overt sexual innuendo. An earlier example of this type of advertisement was a promotion for a LTO version of Burger King's
TenderCrisp sandwich which featured
Darius Rucker in a commercial singing a variant of Burger King's
Have It Your Way jingle that featured a line about "a train of ladies with a nice caboose," where
caboose was not referring to the last car of a train, but the
buttocks of the actresses featured in the commercial. The issues raised by public interest groups in this instance came from complaints over the
double entendres and sexual innuendo on the Coq Roq website. Pictures of scantily clad women posing as
groupies of the band were featured in one section of the site and sported comments such as "groupies love the Coq" and "Groupies love Coq". Protests from the public over the sexual innuendo of the comments forced BK to request CB+P to have content be changed to something more appropriate for a family oriented restaurant.
Slipknot lawsuit In August 2005, CP+B and Burger King became the target of lawyers of the band
Slipknot, who alleged the mask-wearing rooster rockers were a blatant copy of the band's style. The band claimed that CP+B had approached Slipknot's record company,
Roadrunner Records, with an offer to appear in another commercial for Burger King. The band declined on the grounds that they did not want to be associated with a burger chain and they felt that the Coq Roq advertisements were deliberately co-opting the band's signature look and style in order to influence its fans to purchase the chain's products. The band issued a
cease and desist letter to CP+B and BK requesting the advertisements be pulled. When the two parties declined, the band sued for an undisclosed amount.
Tie-ins As a
product tie-in with the 2005–2006
NFL season, Burger King introduced a 36 piece party pack as a limited time offer. This promotion was more general and featured the BK mascot,
the Burger King, digitally superimposed into NFL game footage so appeared to be involved in the game. Some of the players the King replaced include
Steve Young,
Deion Sanders, and
Moe Williams. He has also been depicted performing the
Lambeau Leap and
dumping Gatorade on the head of former
Miami Dolphins head coach
Don Shula. The primary packaging was altered to include the NFL logo; the party pack designed to mimic the texture of a
football, included the NFL logo and a humorous comment along the line of those found on BK packaging at the time. The promotion was part of the company's new sponsorship deal with NASCAR and the new BK/
Michael Waltrip Racing team featuring Waltrip's 00 car number. Several television ads were produced featuring BK Chicken Fries and Waltrip's racing team with a fictional
pit crew member, the chicken server. During 2007, Burger King had another product tie-in with a
Nickelodeon show,
SpongeBob SquarePants. Again the box was altered, this time so the design of the box looked like the character SpongeBob. Later in-store promotions in the U.S. have urged customers to add a six-piece portion to their meal as a snack option. == Naming and trademarks==