Cracker Barrel Outrage Was Almost Certainly Driven by Bots, Researchers Say - "Doesn't that make more sense than lots of people caring about Cracker Barrel?" Gizmodo tells corporations to just ignore any outrage over corporate decisions, since it's just botnets!

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Did something feel…off about the whole Cracker Barrel debacle to you? Did you, in the midst of the endless stream of outrage directed at the Southern country-style restaurant, pause and think, “There’s just no way anyone cares about Cracker Barrel’s logo this much, right?” Well, you might have been onto something. According to data compiled by intelligence platform PeakMetrics, nearly half of the early posts about Cracker Barrel’s logo change appeared to be generated by bots.

PeakMetrics grabbed a sample of 52,000 posts made on X within the first 24 hours of Cracker Barrel’s announcement that it would be modernizing its logo to an admittedly very plain and generic design. In that timeframe, it found that 44.5% of all mentions of Cracker Barrel were flagged as likely or higher bot activity. Those numbers climb even higher when a boycott is mentioned. About 1,000 posts in that first 24-hour period called on people to stop eating at Cracker Barrel, and 49% of those posts got flagged as likely coming from bots. In its report, PeakMetrics states that the boycott was unlikely to be an organic grassroots response but a “bot-assisted amplification seeded by meme/activist accounts.”

The campaigns don’t seem as though they were limited to X, either. According to data collected by Open Measures, similar conversations were happening on the alt-tech platforms like Donald Trump’s Truth Social, Twitter knock-offs Gettr and Gab, 4chan, and Rumble. Over those platforms, posters regularly tied the Cracker Barrel logo change to terms like “woke” and “DEI,” because apparently, one of the demands of leftist extremists is conforming to sans-serif supremacy.

From August 19, when the logo change was announced, to September 5, a few days after the company not only rolled back the logo but also deleted LGBTQ and diversity and inclusion pages from its website, about 2,020,000 posts were made about the whole debacle on X. PeakMetrics estimates that nearly a quarter of those, 24% in total, were likely to be posted by bots. A little ironic, given the group outraged by the whole thing loves to call people who disagree with them NPCs.

Of course, that means 75% of those posts were from people. PeakMetrics notes that the earliest posts expressing dismay and frustration at Cracker Barrel’s decision to update its logo came from human-run accounts. Once the bot networks started to pick up on the trend, though, they blew the whole thing up. “Authentic voices articulated cultural dissatisfaction, which bots then amplified,” the report said.

PeakMetrics didn’t attribute the bot megaphone to any specific organization or state actor. Rather, it found, “The initiators are ideological activist accounts with prior culture-war posting histories, supported by botnets.” One read on that might be that the right-wing outrage farmers seem to have some inauthentic support that makes them seem more influential than they actually are.

Maybe knowing that these outrage cycles aren’t entirely authentic will be enough for corporations like Cracker Barrel to simply ignore the outrage cycle, knowing that most of the bluster won’t amount to anything. Bots don’t really eat biscuits and gravy, after all.
 
I think people are mostly just mad at everything becoming so hyper-minimalist, whether they actually like Cracker Barrel or not.

Not too far from me, there is an old adobe-style Taco Bell building that sits empty across the street from the new hyper-minimalist gray and purple one.

We used to be a country.
 
No kidding? I'm starting to think your account may have a theme

whatever do you mean?

Gene was right about the jews.webp
 
People we don't like aren't human, said the leftist for the 106th time today.
 
I don't think most people were "outraged" over a publicly-traded chain restaurant that isn't that good, they just thought it was a bad logo.
People were more upset than they normally would have been because Cracker Barrel trades in Americana (even if it's phony), and Americana is in short supply. The rebrand was seen as an out-of-touch erasure of even a facsimile of American culture at a time when Americans feel our identity has been devalued and destroyed... all to replace it with typical minimalist design slop nobody real wants.

We also need to consider that Cracker Barrel-esque Americana is often associated with Southerners. That could be a reason risk-adverse shitlib executives make choices like this one, because they think stupid younger generations want a whitewashed, bland representation of the past.
 
Did something feel…off about the whole Cracker Barrel debacle to you?
Yeah, kinda like how apparently so many reddit/twitter/bluesky accounts are so pro faggotry despite being an extreme minority.

Same with commies.

But I bet those are all organic and real. Not like Cracker Barrel. Right?
 
Did something feel…off about the whole Cracker Barrel debacle to you? Did you, in the midst of the endless stream of outrage directed at the Southern country-style restaurant, pause and think, “There’s just no way anyone cares about Cracker Barrel’s logo this much, right?” Well, you might have been onto something. According to data compiled by intelligence platform PeakMetrics, nearly half of the early posts about Cracker Barrel’s logo change appeared to be generated by bots.
I'm pretty sure what one or two times I ended up reading an article on Gizmodo, I learned real quickly the site is little more than a repository for ragebait. Notwithstanding that, blaming bots seems passé and unoriginal in 2025.

Honestly I think people are genuinely tired of what's happening to restaurants and also to consumer stuff on general.
Restaurant quality has declined most of the time while prices have gone up. Even at the truck stop I like to stop at on the way home from day trips, their menu structure changed to increase prices after 2-3 years of relative price stability. Thankfully for them, food quality hasn't suffered yet.

Still, the point remains that people who aren't blind consumers hate it when Corporate America treats them as nothing more than a revenue stream and makes unwanted changes to what's popular and familiar with the misguided belief nobody cares about branding any more.
(Edited for spelling and clarity.)
 
Última edición:
I know plenty of flesh and blood humans that looked at the icky new Cracker Barrel logo and interiors and said "fuck that shit."

"Outrage driven by bots" my ass. You can't get rid of both the cracker and the barrel and expect people to be okay with it.
We've already lost Aunt Jemima and Uncle Ben, they can't take Uncle Herschel too!
 
I know bots are cheap, but I still can't see anyone giving enough of a fuck to pay for twitter spam about fucking cracker barrel. Even assuming some troll was blowing money on a lark for this it still seems farfetched to drop cash to troll a restaurant chain that's busy going out of business. The place's food quality and service have been in a nosedive for years now and its customer base has been dwindling by droves, they're fucked even if they do stop making the restaurants look like shit and keep the older logo.

If there was any use of bots here, my actual suspicion would be that the company itself was using them to gin up fake controversy to get itself free exposure in news cycles that otherwise it could never afford. Put out a retarded logo, deploy the bots to make a lot of noise around it and wind up with bunches of people talking about you, then announce that you love America and tradition and apple pie and are going to listen to your beloved customers and not switch logos. Bam, cheap publicity, remind people you still exist, maybe get some feet in the door after you've pretended to care about their opinion.
 
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