Paging “Some  Comms Person”

Paging “Some Comms Person”

In this episode of Communication Breakdown, Steve Dowling and Craig Carroll unpack three reputational firestorms that reveal deeper cracks in the comms industry. First up: Melinda French Gates’ jab at CEOs “pivoting to what some comms person tells us is the right thing to do”—a comment that drew both defensiveness and reflection from PR pros. Steve and Craig examine whether Gates was attacking communications—or challenging the field to rise to its values. Then, the hosts turn to Twitter (now X), where Elon Musk's latest pivot to AI—and Linda Yaccarino’s quiet exit—spark debate over whether communicators should follow their audiences off the platform. Finally, they dive into a plagiarism scandal at Air India, where a CEO’s post-crash message closely mirrored another airline’s statement. Was it just playbook fatigue or a failure of empathy? This wide-ranging summer episode is a case study in what happens when communications defaults to shortcuts, optics, and defensiveness instead of purpose and precision.

Link:
N Chandrasekaran First & Exclusive Interview After Air India Plane Crash: https://youtu.be/VLbU3BNiGDo?feature=shared

Takeaways
● Gates’ critique spotlights the reputational risk when messaging replaces authentic action.
● Comms pros should respond to criticism with reflection—not defensiveness.
● Twitter’s toxicity makes it an unreliable environment for corporate messaging.
● Crisis playbooks are tools, not scripts—messages must still reflect humanity and values.
● Speed is important in a crisis, but not at the expense of originality and sincerity.
● The PR field must own its role in values communication or risk becoming the scapegoat.

Topics Mentioned
Corporate values, PR defensiveness, strategic pivots, Elon Musk, crisis playbooks, plagiarism, platform strategy, AI backlash, sincerity in messaging, stakeholder trust, reputational risk, values-based leadership, message alignment, corporate response strategy

Companies Mentioned
X (formerly Twitter), Air India, American Airlines, Tata Group, Blue Sky, Writers Guild of America, NPR, Boeing

Chapters
00:00 Melinda French Gates Calls Out Comms
02:15 Should Comms Take It Personally?
06:45 Integrity vs. Optics
09:00 Twitter’s Collapse and Linda Yaccarino’s Exit
12:50 Elon’s AI Pivot and Toxic Platforms
17:40 Thinking Strategically About Leaving X
21:30 The Air India Crash and the Copy-Paste Crisis
25:00 Playbooks vs. Personalized Apologies
28:00 Speed vs. Sincerity in Crisis Messaging
30:25 The Role of the Comms Pro in Crisis Moments
33:00 Final Reflections and a Nod to “Plagiarism Today”

Episode Hashtags
#MelindaFrenchGates #AirIndia #AmericanAirlines #Twitter #X #ElonMusk #BlueSky #WGA #NPR #CrisisCommunication #StrategicMessaging #CorporateReputation #LeadershipComms #StakeholderTrust #PRStrategy #ShawnPNeal #AdvoCast #OCRNetwork

Communication Breakdown is a production of the Observatory on Corporate Reputation.
Hosted by Craig Carroll and Steve Dowling.
Produced by Shawn P Neal and the team at AdvoCast.

For questions, feedback, or episode suggestions, reach out at podcast@ocrnetwork.com

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