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KFC tells customers to hold off on the "Finger Lickin" for now

KFC said its slogan 'finger lickin' good' does not feel quite right
KFC said its slogan 'finger lickin' good' does not feel quite right

Kentucky Fried Chicken is temporarily suspending its long-time advertisement slogan "it's fingerlickin' good".

It said the slogan was inappropriate in the current Covid-19 pandemic situation where personal hygiene has become top priority to stem transmission. 

In an era when face masks and hand-washing have become the norm and health officials are recommending people to stop touching their faces, KFC said the slogan "doesn't feel quite right." 

The slogan, used on and off by the Yum Brands owned chain for 64 years, will be paused in advertising around the globe and re-appear when the time is right, the company said in a press release. 

The restaurant chain unveiled a short video clip on its KFCUK and Ireland YouTube channel, showing various KFC chicken buckets with the "Finger Lickin'" words blurred out from its captions. 

The ad then ends with the tagline "That thing we always say? Ignore it. For now". 

The move comes after the chain pulled down one of its advertisements in the UK featuring the catchphrase, which showed people licking their own fingers as well as those of their companions after eating its chicken. 

The ad, broadcast in March, was widely criticised on social media as promoting behaviour that could increase the chance of Covid-19 and the UK's Advertising Standards Authority received at least 150 complaints.

It is also another example of a major company being forced to rethink names of brands and taglines, following social media backlash for being insensitive or out of touch with the times.

Consumer goods giant Unilever recently changed the name of its 40-year old "Fair & Lovely" skin cream brand, while soda maker PepsiCo plans to change the name of its Aunt Jemima cake mixes after coming under social media pressure. 

"We find ourselves in a unique situation - having an iconic slogan that doesn't quite fit in the current environment," KFC's global chief marketing officer, Catherine Tan-Gillespie, said ina statement.