
Plus: The internet is divided over HelloFresh’s Pride post; Cracker Barrel earnings show promising signs of brand recovery.
At the American Diabetes Association’s Scientific Sessions last week, several diabetes researchers and doctors were removed after handing out an editorial criticizing federal actions affecting NIH funding and diabetes research.
MedPage Today reports the editorial had been published in Diabetes Care, an ADA journal, which made the situation look especially strange from the outside.
The ADA’s first explanation was that they removed people for violating the conference code of conduct, “not because of the viewpoints expressed in those materials,” the outlet said. The organization said the attendees had agreed to follow that code when they registered.
Dr. John Buse of the University of North Carolina School of Medicine, told the outlet, “There were no protests, no speeches, no placards, no bullhorns, but within minutes (several people) were escorted out of the building and banned from returning.”
The ADA’s later public statement leaned harder into a legal explanation. It said that because the ADA is a nonprofit, it has safeguards to follow certain rules. The statement said: “This includes maintaining a strictly nonpartisan environment at all organizational events and functions while engaging across party affiliations to advance our mission.”
The ADA also said it welcomes “scientific inquiry, respectful dialogue, and diverse perspectives” in support of people living with diabetes and obesity.
Amid the drama, ADA President-Elect Jennifer Green and Scientific Sessions Planning Committee Chair Mark Atkinson, resigned from their posts, the outlet said.
Why it matters: This escalated quickly. We can probably assume that the ADA is being careful in its response to avoid political scrutiny, citing its status as a nonprofit entity.
But the larger comms problem is that the statement doesn’t clearly connect the dots for the public. It doesn’t explain exactly what crossed the line, why handing out its own published editorial violated the rules or why removal by security was the right response. It lacks emotion and empathy of any kind.
That leaves room for people to guess intent. In this case, the story becomes “Scientists were kicked out for criticizing the government” over “Scientists violated conference code of conduct.”
When an action looks heavy-handed, legal language won’t be enough to stifle blowback. Companies need to explain the rules, explain the decision and acknowledge why people are upset.
The ADA’s statement gives a rationale, but it doesn’t fully answer the emotional and reputational issue, which is a missed opportunity.
Editor’s Top Reads:
- HelloFresh posted a cheeky Pride Month Instagram The post said: “We know eating isn’t always a top priority this month. We respect that. But for those of you who are … prepping … we have an extensive lineup of high-fiber recipes available. Happy Pride.” The company then added the promo code “BOTTOMSUP” after a commenter suggested it for a discount. Yahoo reports some people loved it and praised the brand for trusting its marketing team, with one person writing, “This is what happens when a brand trusts its marketing team. Excellent work.” The post had more than 86,400 likes. Others said it was too sexual, inappropriate or a bad fit for a food brand. The backlash leaned more negative on X, where critics said it was another example of corporate Pride going too far. This is a reminder that edgy social content can work with one audience and still create risk with another. On Instagram, HelloFresh seemed to get a lot of positive engagement. But once screenshots moved to X, the context, audience and tone changed. HelloFresh likely knew the raunchy post would ruffle a few feathers, but they made a calculated decision that their audience was more likely than not to support Pride month. It’s a risk, sure. But so far, they’ve doubled down on their actions with the “BOTTOMSUP” promo code rather than shrinking in the face of criticism. If you’re going to do something like this, prepare executives for pushback and be prepared to stand your ground. Backpedaling just alienates both groups of people.
- Cracker Barrel reported a surprise profit as it works to return to basics after a rough year for the brand. The Wall Street Journal reports the company raised its outlook, giving investors some good news with a quarterly profit of $42.8 million, up from $12.6 million a year earlier. Its Google star rating also increased 4%, the highest since 2018. But the better numbers do not mean all of Cracker Barrel’s problems are fixed. Customer traffic was down 6.7% and comparable restaurant and retail sales fell. Still, the restaurant chain is showing its working hard on recovery. It also added some original recipes, like freshly rolled and baked biscuits, back onto its menu. After its logo change roiled the internet last year, Cracker Barrel has been trying to rebuild trust. The higher profit is a good sign the brand is moving in the right direction and keeping focus on what made people love it in the first place: signature recipes and nostalgia for a simpler time. It’s a case study in bouncing back from a crisis stronger and more focused than ever before.
- Canada is expected to introduce an online harms bill this week that would include a national social media ban for kids under 16, following in Australia’s footsteps. Marketing News Canada reports that a government source confirmed the plan, though Culture Minister Marc Miller would not comment on the bill’s contents before introducing it. The outlet says governments are getting more serious about kids’ safety online, which means brands that rely on young users through TikTok, Instagram, Snapchat, YouTube or influencer campaigns may need to rethink how they reach that audience. It also means how social and tech companies talk about safety and guardrails will have to be proactive and clear. Promoting new capabilities and tools will now have to be coupled with why those things are safe and how they comply with laws.
Courtney Blackann is a communications reporter. Connect with her on LinkedIn or email her at courtneyb@ragan.com.
The post The Scoop: The American Diabetes Association explains removal of scientists from conference appeared first on PR Daily.










