Alright, so you’re asking about that whole “Fourth of July Sex” business. Man, what a train wreck that was. And no, it’s not what you’re probably thinking, not if you’ve got any sense. It was one of those boneheaded corporate things, a real masterclass in bad decisions. I still kinda shudder when I think about it, even now.

See, this thing, this “Fourth of July Sex,” that was the actual, no-joke internal codename some genius in marketing came up with for a massive summer campaign. Yeah, you heard me. They thought it was edgy, memorable. I thought it was an HR nightmare waiting to happen, and guess what? I wasn’t far off. The whole concept around the campaign itself wasn’t much better, completely out of touch. It was doomed from the start, truly.
My Dive into the Disaster Zone
My job at the time? I got roped into trying to make this… ‘vision’… a reality on the ground. Or, more accurately, to manage the inevitable dumpster fire. I remember sitting in meetings, listening to the pitches, and just trying to gently suggest, “Hey, maybe this wording isn’t great?” or “Are we sure about this angle?” But you know how it goes. Once the higher-ups get a bad idea in their heads, it’s like talking to a brick wall. So, I did what I could. I organized the teams, I prepped the materials, I basically tried to put lipstick on a pig. We all did. We worked ourselves ragged trying to polish this turd.
Then came the launch, right around the holiday. And boy, oh boy. It went over like a lead balloon.
- The public reaction was swift, and it was brutal.
- Press had a field day with the sheer cluelessness of it all, especially if they ever got wind of that internal codename.
- Internally, people were just embarrassed. Morale hit rock bottom.
Everything we flagged as a problem blew up in our faces, just as predicted. It was spectacular, in the worst possible way. I spent weeks doing damage control, fielding angry calls, and trying to explain the unexplainable.
And the fallout? Predictable. Suddenly, all those execs who greenlit “Fourth of July Sex” with such enthusiasm were pointing fingers. Accountability? Vanished. It was an absolute mess. I learned a lot, though. Mostly about corporate nonsense and when to recognize a sinking ship. That whole ordeal, that ridiculous codename and the campaign it stood for, really showed me the true colors of that place. It was a tough lesson, seeing good people’s work go down the drain because of some top-level stupidity.

So yeah, that was my “practice” with the infamous “Fourth of July Sex” project. It was stressful, it was infuriating, but ultimately, it pushed me to move on to something much, much better. Sometimes you gotta walk through the fire to appreciate a cool breeze, right? That’s what I did. Packed my bags and never looked back. Let them keep their disastrous codenames and their bad ideas. I was done.