Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pelotons are stupid.
Says a fat person who can't afford one.
Anonymous wrote:I bet Peloton sales are through the roof now especially with Christmas and New Year's resolutions to boot. And there's no such thing as bad publicity.
Peloton is probably "sorry, not sorry".
Well played.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ok, so I just looked at the tread - it's a treadmill with a tv monitor? Not that the bike is much different, really.
What makes them so much cooler than the machines you can buy at sporting goods stores?
Nothing, it's all psychological. It gives people status and they feel like they're part of an elite community.
DH has owned various pieces of cardio equipment and never used them. Got a Peleton and uses it every day. No difference between it and the three other bikes he's owned, it's just because it's a Peleton.
But that's 99% of marketing. I don't need this expensive MacBook Pro that I'm currently typing on, and I could have gotten a perfectly fine laptop for half the price. I'll totally admit I'm a sucker.
Anonymous wrote:ok, so I just looked at the tread - it's a treadmill with a tv monitor? Not that the bike is much different, really.
What makes them so much cooler than the machines you can buy at sporting goods stores?
Anonymous wrote:ok, so I just looked at the tread - it's a treadmill with a tv monitor? Not that the bike is much different, really.
What makes them so much cooler than the machines you can buy at sporting goods stores?
Anonymous wrote:ok, so I just looked at the tread - it's a treadmill with a tv monitor? Not that the bike is much different, really.
What makes them so much cooler than the machines you can buy at sporting goods stores?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pelotons are stupid.
Says a fat person who can't afford one.
Anonymous wrote:Pelotons are stupid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think people are outraged because of the dynamic portrayed between H and wife, she looks confused, can't decide for herself and then she presents him the video. It looks like she is staying thin for "him" which is incredibly sexist. People wouldn't have cared if the ad's focus was fitness, the focus here was pleasing the H and staying thin for him.
That's how you perceived it.
That’s how most people perceived it per the backlash.
Yes, and more importantly, it's how the large stockholders who dumped the stock perceived it. All of the defensive DCUM Peloton owners in this thread are irrelevant and also out of touch. (I own a Peloton, but I am not blind and see the issues with the ad.)
I just got a message that they're lowering the cost of the monthly digital membership, which is interesting timing.
That message only went out to app users. If you actually had a Peloton, you wouldn’t have gotten it.
It went out to everyone who has the app installed. I have the app installed, because I used the outdoor runs. Do you understand that people can have both the app installed and simultaneously own a bike?
We have some marketing geniuses in this thread, I see.
What does that have to do with marketing? I have a Peloton too and can tell you there’s a ton of confusion right now about why that price notification went out.
Did you get an email? I didn't. What are they lowering the price to?
It was an app notification.
Anonymous wrote:After all the criticism, I watched it expecting something different than what I saw.
I don't get the hate. I wouldn't have thought anything of that ad.