KFC Vies With Burger King to Woo Viral Woman ‘Gutted’ by Chicken Crisis

KFC Vies With Burger King to Woo Viral Woman ‘Gutted’ by Chicken Crisis
People look into a branch of KFC that is closed owing to problems with the delivery of chicken on Feb. 20, 2018 in Bristol, England. (Matt Cardy/Getty Images)
Simon Veazey
2/26/2018
Updated:
6/30/2020

In a bizarre game of PR one-upmanship, Burger King and KFC have both promised a year’s supply of chicken to the British woman whose complaints about KFC’s recent chicken crisis went viral.

Following the closure of 700 of 900 KFC stores last week, the clip of the unnamed woman complaining on a national television news programme stirred interest and amusement around the world.

“I’ve ‘ad to go to Burger King,” she said in the ITV news clip on Feb. 20, after explaining she couldn’t find any KFC stores open.

A sign warns that a limited menu is being operated at a branch of KFC in Bristol, England on Feb. 20, 2018. (Matt Cardy/Getty Images)
A sign warns that a limited menu is being operated at a branch of KFC in Bristol, England on Feb. 20, 2018. (Matt Cardy/Getty Images)

“I tried two places but they are both closed. Absolutely gutted. Will I get a free rice box for coming down?”

On their official UK Twitter account, KFC later offered to make it a reality.

“The horror. We would like to locate this lady. We have one Ricebox left at Head Office and it has her name on it,” they wrote on Feb. 21.

But a few hours later Burger King had stepped in with a rival offer.

People pass a branch of KFC that is closed owing to problems with the delivery of chicken on Feb. 20, 2018 in Bristol, England. (Matt Cardy/Getty Images)
People pass a branch of KFC that is closed owing to problems with the delivery of chicken on Feb. 20, 2018 in Bristol, England. (Matt Cardy/Getty Images)
“We’ll raise your leftover Ricebox with a year’s supply of fresh King Boxes! Someone put us in touch with her,” Burger King wrote on Twitter.
Less than 20 minutes later, the Colonel’s social media account had matched the new bid.

“Putting all your chips on the table..bold move BK. When our chips arrive we will match your stakes and too put all our chips on the table. Until then we have limited chips.”

https://twitter.com/KFC_UKI/status/966387848105652224

After KFC ran out of chicken and closed more than half of its 900 restaurants across the United Kingdom, a London police department asked people not to report the gastronomical inconvenience as an emergency worthy of police attention.

“Please do not contact us about the #KFCCrisis,” tweeted the Metropolitan Police Service for the London East End Borough of Tower Hamlets, using the popular hashtag.

“[I]t is not a police matter if your favourite eatery is not serving the menu that you desire.”

KFC has recently switched its delivery company, Bidvest, for DHL and German group QSL. So far the change hasn’t gone smoothly.
“If you were one of KFC’s 750 franchisees you could order your replacement chicken and other supplies and usually within about 24 hours a lorry from Bidvest would appear outside your store with what you needed. The stores were used to that kind of just-in-time ordering, and that’s what’s caught them out,” said technology analyst Chris Green, according to the Guardian.

“It is doing huge brand damage to KFC. The franchisee can’t go off and buy chicken from a wholesaler. Their contracts with KFC prevents them from going to third parties. And KFC can’t put its name on chicken it didn’t supply. The franchisee and KFC have both got both hands tied behind their backs.”

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Simon Veazey is a UK-based journalist who has reported for The Epoch Times since 2006 on various beats, from in-depth coverage of British and European politics to web-based writing on breaking news.
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