Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

P.E.I. police service apologizes to Nickelback, takes down viral 'joke' post

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Dec, 2016 01:23 PM
    KENSINGTON, P.E.I. — A small-town P.E.I. police department has issued a public apology to Nickelback, and taken down a social media post that threatened to force drunk drivers to listen to the Alberta band's music.
     
    In a heartfelt Facebook post Friday, a Kensington police officer said that after the "joke" post went viral, he began to feel like a bully.
     
    "I am sorry to (band members) Chad, Ryan, Mike and Daniel. Not as just members of Nickelback, but more importantly as fellow Canadians. I'm sorry guys because I didn't take a moment to think of you AS just guys," the officer said.
     
    "How would I tell my son he was wrong for picking on a kid in the playground when I was doing the same thing, but I was doing it not on the local playground, no, I was doing it on a global scale to a global audience."
     
    Friday's post was unsigned, but Const. Robb Hartlen of the service last weekend shared a social media post promising to force any drunk drivers to listen to the Alberta band while in the back seat of a cruiser.
     
    "So please, let's not ruin a perfectly good unopened copy of Nickelback. You don't drink and drive and we won't make you listen to it," Hartlen said then. 
     
    In Friday's post, though, the officer said a message meant to deter drunk drivers instead made a charity-minded Canadian band — he particularly mentioned its response after the Fort McMurray wildfires — the butt of jokes around the world.
     
    "I was sure a hugely successful band would be fine with a little goodwill shade thrown their way, after all it's for a good cause. But the more successful the post became, the less the Don't Drink and Drive message was mentioned and the fact we love or love to hate Nickelback took centre stage," he wrote.
     
     
    "And that prompted me to think less about Nickelback as the 'entity' and more about the four guys, four human beings from Alberta who were dragged into this international story. And the more I thought about that, the less funny the humour seemed."
     
    He said he loves being a police officer and being "a symbol of what is right and just with our world," and suggested he felt hypocritical going into schools and telling kids bullying is wrong.
     
    He said he reached out to the band's four members and their families. "And as we spoke I found out some wonderful news. They feel just as strong about it as I do. So we decided it was best to take down the original post."
     
    He said the police service plans to launch a new anti-drunk driving message, and asked readers to "stay tuned."
     
    The Kensington service's original post created two kinds of controversy among commenters: Those offended the police service was making a joke about drunk driving, and Nickelback fans annoyed the band was the butt of the joke.
     
    The officer said he was stunned by criticism he was making light of drinking and driving.
     
    "I, as a police officer, and as EVERY police officer before me, know too well the catastrophic devastation drinking behind the wheel can create," he wrote.
     
    "We see this destruction. We smell the pain mixed with booze covered in motor oil and blood. We take these images and sensations home with us. At no point will any of us make light of drinking and driving."
     
    Nickelback frontman Chad Kroeger told The Canadian Press in a 2014 interview that the critics have actually done the band a favour by heightening the public discussion about the group.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    PM Hopes To Attract Billions In Private Capital For Infrastructure Projects

    TORONTO — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau began a day-long pitch Monday to some of the world's most powerful institutional investors, urging them to invest in Canada, and specifically in infrastructure.

    PM Hopes To Attract Billions In Private Capital For Infrastructure Projects

    Rapper Carvel Clayton, 21, Charged With 2nd Degree Murder In Halifax Shooting

    Rapper Carvel Clayton, 21, Charged With 2nd Degree Murder In Halifax Shooting
    HALIFAX — A rapper who made a heartfelt plea for an end to violence after a series of killings in Halifax earlier this year has been charged with murder in a weekend killing.

    Rapper Carvel Clayton, 21, Charged With 2nd Degree Murder In Halifax Shooting

    Othman Hamdan Pleads Not Guilty To Four Terrorism-Related Charges In B.C. Supreme Court

    Othman Hamdan Pleads Not Guilty To Four Terrorism-Related Charges In B.C. Supreme Court
    Othman Hamdan is in B.C. Supreme Court facing charges of encouraging the commission of murder, assault and mischief, all for terrorist purposes.

    Othman Hamdan Pleads Not Guilty To Four Terrorism-Related Charges In B.C. Supreme Court

    Toronto Has Highest Child Poverty Rate Of Canadian Cities

    Toronto Has Highest Child Poverty Rate Of Canadian Cities
    The report, titled "Divided City: Life in Canada's Child Poverty Capital," says 133,000 children in Toronto — 27 per cent — were living in low-income families in 2014, the year the data were collected.

    Toronto Has Highest Child Poverty Rate Of Canadian Cities

    Man Killed By Vancouver Police In Botched Canadian Tire Robbery Identified

    Man Killed By Vancouver Police In Botched Canadian Tire Robbery Identified
    VANCOUVER — The BC Coroners Service has named the 38-year-old man fatally shot by Vancouver Police last week.

    Man Killed By Vancouver Police In Botched Canadian Tire Robbery Identified

    Toronto Removes Signs Urging White People To Mobilize Against Multiculturalism

    Toronto Removes Signs Urging White People To Mobilize Against Multiculturalism
    City councillor Janet Davis tweeted Monday that staff were also looking into who is behind the posters, which were spotted in her ward

    Toronto Removes Signs Urging White People To Mobilize Against Multiculturalism