- Brian Morrissey
After enduring a week of
criticism that an iPhone application for its AMP Energy brand is
sexist, Pepsi is pulling the plug on the effort.
"We have decided to discontinue the AMP iPhone application," a
Pepsi representative said in a statement. "We've listened to a
variety of audiences and determined this was the most appropriate
course of action."

The
"Amp up before you score" iPhone application
gave dudes a variety of pickup lines and background info through
digital flip cards for 24 different types of women, ranging from
"rebound girl" to "treehugger." It included a "brag list," told
users to keep "a name, date and whatever details you remember" and
encouraged guys to "flaunt it" by broadcasting their scores via
Twitter and Facebook updates.
The R/GA-created application met with stiff criticism in blogs and
on Twitter early last week, which quickly spilled over into news
stories on National Public Radio, CNN and Fox News.
The notoriety made the app one of the most popular free apps
available for the iPhone.
Pepsi responded to the criticism with a Tweeted apology on Oct. 12,
saying it was meant to "show the humorous lengths guys go 2 pick up
women."
The post included the #pepsifail hash tag Twitterers were using to
discuss the controversy. Pepsi was subsequently faulted for
attaching the app to its brand rather than AMP's.
Nielsen Business
Media
Pepsi Pulls Amp iPhone App
Oct 22, 2009
- Brian Morrissey
After enduring a week of
criticism that an iPhone application for its AMP Energy brand is sexist, Pepsi is pulling the plug on the effort.
"We have decided to discontinue the AMP iPhone application," a Pepsi representative said in a statement. "We've listened to a variety of audiences and determined this was the most appropriate course of action."

The
"Amp up before you score" iPhone application gave dudes a variety of pickup lines and background info through digital flip cards for 24 different types of women, ranging from "rebound girl" to "treehugger." It included a "brag list," told users to keep "a name, date and whatever details you remember" and encouraged guys to "flaunt it" by broadcasting their scores via Twitter and Facebook updates.
The R/GA-created application met with stiff criticism in blogs and on Twitter early last week, which quickly spilled over into news stories on National Public Radio, CNN and Fox News.
The notoriety made the app one of the most popular free apps available for the iPhone.
Pepsi responded to the criticism with a Tweeted apology on Oct. 12, saying it was meant to "show the humorous lengths guys go 2 pick up women."
The post included the #pepsifail hash tag Twitterers were using to discuss the controversy. Pepsi was subsequently faulted for attaching the app to its brand rather than AMP's.
Nielsen Business Media