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  • 2021-09-20 (xsd:date)
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  • Did a Funeral Home Advertise Using the Slogan 'Don't Get Vaccinated'? (en)
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  • In September 2021, social media users enthusiastically shared photographs of what appeared to be a mobile advertisement for a North Carolina funeral home that employed the unconventional strategy of encouraging members of the public not to get vaccinated against COVID-19 — with the implication being that, since lower vaccination rates would lead to a higher number of otherwise preventable deaths, this would give the funeral directors more customers, as it were. On Sept. 19, for example, Twitter user @yourgeniushands posted a picture of the truck, along with the following description: This truck is making laps around Bank of America Stadium before the Panthers game in Charlotte. The truck itself bore the slogan Don't get vaccinated, along with the name Wilmore Funeral Home and the website WilmoreFuneralHome.com. Photographs of the truck were authentic, and not the result of digital editing. However, the ad campaign had nothing to do with any real funeral home. Rather, it was created by the Charlotte advertising agency Boone Oakley, and was actually designed to encourage the public to get vaccinated against COVID-19. As such, we are issuing a rating of Mostly False. Other photographs of the truck, taken from various angles, were posted to Facebook, demonstrating that the messaging on the truck was not the result of digital editing. The screenshot below shows just a selection of photographs of the truck, posted to Facebook, and demonstrates the significant popularity of those pictures on that platform: The truck also bore the logo and phone number of Crenshaw Visions, a Lancaster, South Carolina advertising firm. The website WilmoreFuneralHome.com consisted of the following message: On the site, the phrase Get vaccinated now linked to the COVID-19 vaccination portal for StarMed Healthcare, a Charlotte healthcare provider. After this fact check was originally published, the Charlotte advertising firm Boone Oakley claimed responsibility for the Wilmore Funeral Home campaign, writing on Twitter It was us. Get vaccinated: Snopes spoke to the agency's president and creative director, David Oakley, who confirmed that the campaign was intended to encourage members of the public to get vaccinated, and had no connection to any real funeral home. Oakley provided copies of text messages which contained plans for the Wilmore campaign, dated weeks before its Sept. 19 launch, thereby definitively proving Boone Oakley was indeed behind the eye-catching campaign. Even before Snopes obtained this definitive proof, good reasons existed to doubt that the campaign had any link to a real funeral home. We checked databases kept by the North Carolina Board of Funeral Services, and the South Carolina Board of Funeral Service, and we could find no licensed funeral home or funeral home professional using the name Wilmore. Nor did we find any listing for a Wilmore Funeral Home on the websites of the North Carolina Funeral Directors Association or the South Carolina Funeral Directors Association. This could have meant that Wilmore Funeral Home is registered in another state or that it was registered only very recently in either North Carolina or South Carolina. However, as we know now for certain, it was because the business was in fact the creation of a Charlotte ad agency. Although the 2021 North Carolina ad campaign had no connection to any real funeral home, such a business has previously used the ironic slogan Don't get vaccinated in order to advertise its services, in a very different set of circumstances. In 2018, the Taffo funeral home in Rome, Italy posted an ad to Facebook that featured a photograph of coffins stacked on top of one another, with the tagline Non vaccinatevi / Siamo pronti anche ad un'epidemia (Don't get vaccinated / We're also ready for an epidemic): The ad was an ironic dig at anti-vaccine activists, who had opposed an expansion of childhood vaccine requirements signed into law a year earlier, in Italy. In 2017, after a series of significant measles outbreaks, the Italian parliament passed a law that expanded from four to 10 the number of vaccinations required for children aged up to 16, as a condition of attending school. Boone Oakley president David Oakley told Snopes he was unaware of the Taffo funeral home ad, until it was brought to his attention by Snopes. (en)
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