Google has issued an apology and removed a temporary email feature after its April Fools' 2016 joke backfired. Gmail users woke up to ...
Google has issued an apology and removed a temporary email feature after its April Fools' 2016 joke backfired. Gmail users woke up to find an option to send a "Mic Drop" response to email threads. It consisted of an animated gif of a minion character from Despicable Me dropping a microphone. It also subsequently muted the conversation for the sender, which led many to believe their email threads were deleted and unrecoverable. The feature was poorly received by some users who took to the Gmail Help Forum to complain, saying the "childish" animations were accidentally included in important and professional emails. "I hit this thing by accident in a professional email sending a contract. This is ridiculous and not funny at all. Remove it please!!!" one user wrote. Another claims to have lost his job saying, "Thanks to Mic Drop I just lost my job. I am a writer and had a deadline to meet. I sent my articles to my boss and never heard back from her. I inadvertently sent the email using the "Mic Drop" send button. There were corrections that needed to be made on my articles, and I never received her replies. "My boss took offense to the Mic Drop animation and assumed that I didn't reply to her because I thought her input was petty (hence the Mic Drop). I just woke up to a very angry voicemail from her which is how I found out about this 'hilarious"' prank," a forum post with the topic headline "Will Google give me a job" read. Google's Gmail team has since removed the feature and apologized, blaming the mishaps on a "bug."
A Singaporean online grocer, Honestbee, created a PR nightmare with their April Fools' joke after announcing an Indiana Jones-themed sale of meat from endangered animals such as panda, tiger, and whale. The company started taking orders earlier in the week on its site, with the delivery date cunningly set as April 1, 2016. The idea was to draw attention to the issue of wildlife conservation, with plans for proceeds from purchases on the fake page to be donated to a handful of wildlife conservation charities, including the World Wildlife Fund and Wildlife Reserves Singapore. But before April Fools' Day, angry comments started showing up on Honestbee's Facebook page, many from customers who knew it was a stunt but weren't charmed by it. Netizens found the prank “distasteful,” “absolutely revolting,” and “in poor, poor taste.” Some threatened to boycott the company and called on others to do the same. Customers who paid for the exotic meat received an animal-themed snack pack on April 1, with some information on how to make further donations to wildlife charities.