Starbucks Korea got into massive controversy after declaring May 18th “Tank Day” to promote a new tumbler line. Koreans were immediately furious because May 18th is the anniversary of the Gwangju Uprising, where hundreds of civilians were killed by the military under Chun Doo-hwan’s dictatorship. Tanks being used against protesters became one of the defining symbols of the massacre.

    The backlash got even worse when Starbucks Korea used the phrase “a ttak on the desk” as the campaign slogan, which many people connected to the death of activist Park Jong-chul, who died after being tortured by police in 1987. Authorities notoriously tried to cover it up by claiming he collapsed after an officer slammed the desk during interrogation.

    Starbucks Korea and its parent company, Shinsegae Group, claimed it was all a coincidence, but many Koreans don’t believe that, especially since Shinsegae is known for its conservative politics. Its chairman, Chung Yong-jin, is a vocal supporter of Donald Trump and has long been controversial in Korea for how he had treated his ex-wife.

    Posted by revoirbaby0111

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    11 Comments

    1. revoirbaby0111 on

      fyi, Chung Yong-jin is a Samsung nepo baby who’s friend with Trump and abused his ex-wife with his family, forcing her to go no-contact with her children after divorce.

    2. Criticall16 on

      Certain Politicians: “You shouldn’t to go to college and get a degree in history, culture or politics”

      2 mins later ….

      Ends up getting fired and posting an apppology because of absence of knowledge of history, culture and politics.

    3. No way they did not know what they were doing. They tried to bring American PR stereotypes to generate hype and fucked around way too hard.

    4. I don’t understand how it got this far? This campaign was planned and approved entirely by the Korean office, which idea came from a Korean intern to sign off several people all the way to the Starbucks Korea CEO? Like Starbucks US and global and boycott whatever, but a huge conglomerate won’t just allow something this sensitive for shits and giggles. What the hell happened in Starbucks Korea

    5. tore_a_bore_a on

      Seems like an American equivalent of this would be if a company had an ICE day and celebrated the death of Renee Good and Alex Pretti

    6. Him being fired was the only way it was going to go. I do not know if he either:

      a) Was planning on it, so he could become a conservative martyr.

      b) Too stupid to realize – in which case shouldn’t be heading a national company.

    7. I just love to read about people that are having whole other lives and experiences than I know nothing of. People out here just living.

    8. This_Independent2686 on

      I always admire south koreans and how serious they are about protecting their history. You will get canceled for real for distorting important aspects of their history. They don’t play about that.