Oh, boy!
This guy is apparently an ultra-nationalist type and decided to do a Tank Day promotion. In South Korea, this was something that happened in 1980, a time when South Korea was being ruled by a military dictatorship. There was a brutal crack-down on pro-democracy protesters and a lot of people died when an unidentified person ordered troops to open fire on the protesters. A lot of people also just disappeared and still haven't been accounted for.
The CEO decided to 'celebrate' Tank Day, obviously a severely tone-deaf idea, which included special Tank Day tumblers and mugs. The public responded with videos of said tumblers and mugs being destroyed with hammers and such, along with other Starbucks merch being destroyed. The article goes on to report people getting refunds on prepaid gift cards and deleting their Starbucks smartphone apps. When word finally reached the USA HQ, he was fired. Starbucks Global announced that the CEO was no longer employed by the corporation and was no longer in that role.
The company that owns just over 2/3rds of Starbucks South Korea, Shinsegae Group, saw their stock take a 5.5% dive in trading.
From the article, "...Shinsegae Group Chairman Chung Yong-jin also issued a public apology.
“I deeply bow in apology as the representative of the group,” Chung said. The marketing “deeply hurt the public, the bereaved families, and the victims of the May 18 demonstration.”
Also from the article, the President of South Korea, Lee Jae Myung said on Twitter that "...he was “enraged” by Starbucks’ campaign and demanded it apologize to families of people killed during the uprising."
One more lesson on how to utterly ruin your high-paying career.
https://www.cnbc.com/2026/05/19/starbucks-korea-head-fired-after-tank-day-promotion-sparks-public-uproar.html
This guy is apparently an ultra-nationalist type and decided to do a Tank Day promotion. In South Korea, this was something that happened in 1980, a time when South Korea was being ruled by a military dictatorship. There was a brutal crack-down on pro-democracy protesters and a lot of people died when an unidentified person ordered troops to open fire on the protesters. A lot of people also just disappeared and still haven't been accounted for.
The CEO decided to 'celebrate' Tank Day, obviously a severely tone-deaf idea, which included special Tank Day tumblers and mugs. The public responded with videos of said tumblers and mugs being destroyed with hammers and such, along with other Starbucks merch being destroyed. The article goes on to report people getting refunds on prepaid gift cards and deleting their Starbucks smartphone apps. When word finally reached the USA HQ, he was fired. Starbucks Global announced that the CEO was no longer employed by the corporation and was no longer in that role.
The company that owns just over 2/3rds of Starbucks South Korea, Shinsegae Group, saw their stock take a 5.5% dive in trading.
From the article, "...Shinsegae Group Chairman Chung Yong-jin also issued a public apology.
“I deeply bow in apology as the representative of the group,” Chung said. The marketing “deeply hurt the public, the bereaved families, and the victims of the May 18 demonstration.”
Also from the article, the President of South Korea, Lee Jae Myung said on Twitter that "...he was “enraged” by Starbucks’ campaign and demanded it apologize to families of people killed during the uprising."
One more lesson on how to utterly ruin your high-paying career.
https://www.cnbc.com/2026/05/19/starbucks-korea-head-fired-after-tank-day-promotion-sparks-public-uproar.html
no subject
Date: 2026-05-25 11:37 am (UTC)This was not an accident or tone-deafness on his part. Not at all. He was celebrating that old dictatorship.
no subject
Date: 2026-05-25 12:51 pm (UTC)Fired by Starbucks and is it wrong to say, he will probably try to take his ideals into politics?
At least that is what would happen over here. :o :o :o
Gotta admit, I didn't know/realize they had a military dictatorship that recently. :o
Hugs, Jon
no subject
Date: 2026-05-25 02:30 pm (UTC)Wait, that could happen, couldn't it? And unlike the South Koreans, who value their democracy, 'Murricans would probably just take it in stride.
no subject
Date: 2026-05-25 05:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2026-05-25 06:08 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2026-05-25 10:44 pm (UTC)Sadly, he may well have made enough money during even a short tenure to be in the top 1% by wealth in his country, or even the world.
(I know nothing about Korean executive compensation, except the observation that a tech career doesn't pay (there) anything like going into middle management. But in the US, executive compensation tends obscene.)