When Apple Inc. (AAPL) is already having a rough week, leave it to Justin Bieber to pile on with a very specific grievance about iPhone design.
The pop star fired off a post on X this past Saturday complaining about the dictation button on iPhones. His problem? The text-to-speech feature keeps getting accidentally triggered and interrupting whatever music he's listening to. As frustrations go, it's pretty relatable.
"If I hit this dictation button after sending a text and it beeps and stops my music one more time, I'm gonna find everyone at apple and put them in a rear naked choke hold," Bieber wrote.
Now, celebrity complaints about tech products aren't usually newsworthy. But the timing here is notable. Apple is currently navigating some significant executive departures that signal bigger strategic challenges.
The company recently announced that John Giannandrea, senior vice president for machine learning and AI strategy, is leaving. So is Lisa Jackson, vice president for environment, policy, and social initiatives. And Alan Dye, vice president of human interface design, is heading to Meta's new creative studio.
The Bigger Picture
These exits come at an awkward moment for Apple, which is fighting to stay competitive with OpenAI, Meta, and Google in the AI arms race. OpenAI just launched its own app store, positioning itself as a legitimate rival to Apple's ecosystem.
Bieber's complaint might seem trivial on its surface, but user experience gripes from high-profile figures can shape public perception in ways that matter. When you're already dealing with executive turnover and competitive pressure, the last thing you need is celebrities broadcasting their iPhone annoyances to millions of followers.