McDonald's CEO Burger Video: Ketchup With This Bizarre New Meme

McDonald's CEO Burger Video: Ketchup With This Bizarre New Meme

The executive tentatively took a bite of his company's new "product," and now even McDonald's own social media is relishing the mockery.

Headshot of Gael Cooper
Headshot of Gael Cooper

CNET editor Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, a journalist and pop-culture junkie, is co-author of "Whatever Happened to Pudding Pops? The Lost Toys, Tastes and Trends of the '70s and '80s," as well as "The Totally Sweet '90s." She's been a journalist since 1989, working at Mpls.St.Paul Magazine, Twin Cities Sidewalk, the Minneapolis Star Tribune, and NBC News Digital. She's Gen X in birthdate, word and deed. If Marathon candy bars ever come back, she'll be first in line.

Expertise Breaking news, entertainment, lifestyle, travel, food, shopping and deals, product reviews, money and finance, video games, pets, history, books, technology history, and generational studies Credentials

  • Co-author of two Gen X pop-culture encyclopedia for Penguin Books. Won "Headline Writer of the Year"​ award for 2017, 2014 and 2013 from the American Copy Editors Society. Won first place in headline writing from the 2013 Society for Features Journalism.

Corporate executives: They're absolutely nothing like us. You might be seeing memes and jokes on social media mocking what appears to be some random man's wimpy bite into a burger. Here's the big-mouthed backstory.

On Tuesday, McDonald's launched its Big Arch burger, and a month before that, McDonald's CEO Chris Kempczinski posted an Instagram video tasting it. But instead of digging into the double-patty, sauced-up and sloppy, 1,020-calorie burger, he... well, delicately nibbles at it? Like the late Queen Elizabeth II might have genteely sampled a cucumber sandwich at afternoon tea?

Kempczinski sings the praises of the Big Arch and then takes the world's tiniest chomp at it, insisting he took "a big bite, for a Big Arch." 

Does he know what "big" means?

Not only that, but the CEO also says, patting the burger container awkwardly, "I love this product." As if it's an Ikea desk. This is America, Chris, we say "burger" here.

Kempczinski's video came out a month before the burger's release, and some commenters started grilling the big burger boss right away. But with this week's release of Big Arch, the internet rediscovered the video.

Comedian Cat Sullivan recreates the CEO's video with an even stronger reluctance to taste the food, using the word "product" constantly.

Other restaurant chains especially sank their teeth into the joke. Burger King's official account cracked, "We couldn't finish it either" and slammed up an Instagram of its president, Tom Curtis, eating a BK Whopper with a lot more, uh, relish.

Wendy's created a LinkedIn video showing its president, Pete Suerken, making and enjoying a Wendy's burger, and he even got in a dig at McDonald's famously often-broken ice cream machines. Suerken helps himself to a Frosty dessert and announces, "Oh, wait! Our machines are always working."

Other brands piled on the original post.

"Gonna start test driving our cars 1 metre at a time," posted car company Mini.

"Is the big bite in the room with us?" cracked the Instagram account for WingStop Canada.

"We do love a square," wrote Wendy's UK.

But at least the McDonald's social media account tried to make fun of its own big boss. The company posted a photo of the Big Arch, using the same awkward term for it that the CEO did, with the caption, "Take a bite of our new product."

The caption from the McDonald's Instagram account is at least gamely self-aware, reading, "can't believe this got approved."

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