Snapchat ad asked would you rather ‘Slap Rihanna’ or ‘Punch Chris Brown’
A disturbing advertisement slipped through the Snapchat review process, despite the ad's flippant reference to violence against women, and to Chris Brown's infamous domestic assault against his then-girlfriend Rihanna.
SEE ALSO: Sorry haters, Evan Spiegel is not sorry about Snapchat's redesign
Screenshots of the advertisement for a "Would You Rather!" game appeared on Twitter over the weekend and into Monday. The image asks users whether they'd "Slap Rihanna" or "Punch Chris Brown," an obvious reference to the 2009 assault.
The ad caught the eye of activist Brittany Packnett and, through her, former first daughter Chelsea Clinton. She called the ad, "just awful."
@Snapchat
This was one of the ads on Snapchat. What. The. Fuck.
How dare y'all disrespect @rihanna like this. Smh pic.twitter.com/JVbfzD9t69— Tay (@Tay_ole) March 11, 2018
What a wonderful day on Snapchat... but didn’t Chris Brown beat the shit out of Rihanna ?? 🐸☕️ pic.twitter.com/BFjNzApQjq
— Parker Brougham (@ParkerBrougham) March 12, 2018
Is it just me, or is this ad that popped up on my Snapchat extremely tone deaf? Like what were they thinking with this? pic.twitter.com/7kP9RHcgNG
— Royce Mann (@TheRoyceMann) March 12, 2018
I know that social media ads go through an approval process from the platform.
This means @Snapchat approved an ad that makes light of domestic violence.
The update ain’t the only thing that’s wack over there, friends. https://t.co/PmbJn4zCel— Brittany Packnett (@MsPackyetti) March 12, 2018
Just awful. Awful that anyone thinks this is funny. Awful that anyone thinks this is appropriate. Awful that any company would approve this. Thank you Brittany for calling this out.
— Chelsea Clinton (@ChelseaClinton) March 12, 2018
As Packnett notes, advertisements are reviewed by the team over at Snap. Per the company's official advertising policies:
The page also details an extensive list of "Prohibited Content," including, "Content that demeans, degrades, or shows hate toward a particular race, gender, culture, country, belief, or toward any member of a protected class."
A spokesperson from Snap tells Mashable: "The ad was reviewed and approved in error, as it violates our advertising guidelines. We immediately removed the ad last weekend, once we became aware. We are sorry that this happened."