Twentieth Century Fox apologizes for “inappropriate” “fake news” promo campaign for “A Cure for Wellness”

20th Century Fox(NEW YORK) — Twentieth Century Fox apologized on Thursday for using several fake news sites and made-up stories to promote its new movie, A Cure for Wellness, reports Variety. The controversial campaign was slammed on social media.

The studio said in a statement: “In raising awareness for our films, we do our best to push the boundaries of traditional marketing in order to creatively express our message to consumers. In this case, we got it wrong.”

“The digital campaign was inappropriate on every level, especially given the trust we work to build every day with our consumers.  We have reviewed our internal approval process and made appropriate changes to ensure that every part of a campaign is elevated to and vetted by management in order to avoid this type of mistake in the future. We sincerely apologize.”

The promoters of the film created websites with names like NY Morning Post, Salt Lake City Guardian, Houston Leader, Sacramento Dispatch and the Indianapolis Gazette, and they posted realistic-looking news stories about completely fictional events.  One story featured President Trump holding a secret meeting with Vladimir Putin, while another said Trump was going to ban vaccinations.

The stories asked readers to send their complaints about the fictional stories by using hashtags like #ACureForWellness. That had consumers posting the A Cure for Wellness taglines, without actually knowing the stories they were commenting on were fake, and that this was just a promotion for a film.

When legitimate news organizations exposed the stunt, Fox and Regency were slammed by critics on social media for disseminating fake news at a time when the news media is already in conflict with the president over what reporting from news organizations can be trusted.

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