![]() 01/16/2017 at 21:01 • Filed to: None | ![]() | ![]() |
Cleaning up my Twitter and I find this!
Overused click bait jokes are never actually overused.
![]() 01/16/2017 at 22:48 |
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Yeah, because the social media team definitely knew there was diesel cheating going on at the time. Should the engineering team have sent the marketing department a memo telling them not to advertise the diesels because they were cheating?
![]() 01/16/2017 at 23:09 |
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They pulled the TDI ads from YouTube, and removed TDI from their website. They also stopped selling TDI merchandise
![]() 01/17/2017 at 09:58 |
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Yeah, and these tweets were published like a year and a half before the scandal broke. People don’t go looking for tweets like they go looking for YouTube videos. This is hardly a ‘fail’.