‘Nothing is truly Scandinavian’ top Nordic airline SAS declares in ad — what could go wrong with that?

12 Feb, 2020 08:26 / Updated 5 years ago

SAS, the top airline of Denmark, Norway and Sweden, has restricted the reach of a video commercial declaring the entire Scandinavian culture borrowed and featuring a black guy saying he is no better than his ‘Viking ancestors. ’

Hijacking a hot button social topic to generate some good publicity is a tricky task. Just ask Gillette with their last year take on ‘toxic masculinity,’ or Pepsi equating drinking its soda with fighting for justice in street protests a few years ago. Scandinavian Airlilnes, or SAS, had its own tone deaf disaster of a commercial pulled after public outcry.

The ad published on Monday starts with a punchline that nothing is “truly Scandinavian” before going down the list of things that people in Denmark, Norway and Sweden take pride of — wind power plants, popularity of bicycles, parental care rights and democracy — and declares them “copied.”

“It gets worse. Rumor has it that the oh-so-Swedish meatballs might not be as Swedish as you think, but Turkish,” the video goes on.

Also on rt.com Documentary about dark-skinned ‘first Swedes’ sparks horror on Twitter

The dismissive attitude is supposed to be counterpointed with a positive message: all those Scandinavian things had been brought from visiting other nations and adopting good things found there. It’s served with the notion that “we are no better than our Viking ancestors,” read by a bespectacled black man.

For some reason, the ad didn’t go down as well as expected. Instead of flocking to SAS website to buy tickets and fly to foreign lands for some good-spirited cultural appropriation, people went en mass to its pages on social media to vent off their outrage.

The original video, which had been quickly downvoted into the abyss, was apparently pulled from SAS' YouTube channel. It was later re-added, with comments disabled, though it too has since accumulated over 30,000 dislikes. The ad was also pulled from SAS’ Twitter page and Instagram, though it continued to circulate (and be mocked) on other users’ pages.

Well, one probably shouldn’t confuse thought-provoking with provocative when making ads.

If you like this story, share it with a friend!