The Daily Carnage

The savvy marketer's hub for industry news, insights, resources, and culture.

Issues

View All
Butterfly Food

Butterfly Food

Using our marketing superpowers to protect the environment? We’re all in on that, every time.

Milkweed is an essential plant that Monarch butterflies rely on, but its name doesn’t do a great job of inspiring conservation efforts.

That’s why Lafayette American has released new Butterfly Superhighway seed packs featuring three finalist names: Butterfly Landing, Monarch Milk, and Milky Way, with packaging inspired by Alexander Girard. 

This marks the final year of the crowdsourced rebrand, which has seen playful suggestions like “Snacky Snack” and “Milk Map.”

Monarch populations have dropped 22% over the past century, so go plant some Milky Way, will ya?

Lookin’ Up

Lookin’ Up

KitKat’s latest campaign hinges on two truths: 1) we have a collective screen addition, and 2) KitKats happen to be the same shape as mobile phones. 📱🍫

So, VML Czechia swapped smartphones for KitKats in clever OOH ads to remind us that chocolate is way better than doomscrolling. The famous “Have a Break. Have a KitKat” line stays small and subtle—perfect for an anti-distraction message.

Brit Grit

Brit Grit

Mini USA is skipping the New York Auto Show—but not quietly.

With help from Goodby Silverstein & Partners, the brand launched a plucky outdoor campaign riffing on rival car brands’ iconic taglines.

Billboards around the Javits Center feature lines like “’ELLO, JEEP PEOPLE. There’s only ever been one street-legal go-kart,” playfully poking at Jeep’s “There’s Only One.”

Other ads take on Mercedes, Ford, and Porsche in the same irreverent tone.

Full-page New York Times ads and billboards in key cities reinforce Mini’s challenger spirit.

I’m Loanin’ It

I’m Loanin’ It

Chili’s is taking aim at redonkulous fast food prices with its new Big QP burger and a saucy little NYC pop-up called “Fast Food Financing.”

Created by Edelman US, the campaign highlights Chili’s “3 For Me” menu—offering the Big QP (with 85% more beef than a McD’s QPC), plus fries, bottomless chips and salsa, and a drink for $10.99.

The April 16–17 pop-up, located directly beside a certain fast food joint known for its clown mascot, mimics a loan approval experience. Visitors are rewarded with gift cards and access to a Chili’s speakeasy to try the Big QP for themselves.

Warning: Thirst Trap

Warning: Thirst Trap

You know what’s good? Bad Bunny’s steamy campaign for Calvin Klein.

You know what’s even better? Progressive’s perfectly executed stunt to piggyback on the Bad Bunny buzz.

With billboards of the nearly-naked superstar turning heads in New York and Miami, the insurance brand worked with Gut Miami to place branded trucks near the ads, warning drivers with lines like “Thirst trap ahead” and “Less staring, more steering.”

Hitting the Nail on the Head

Hitting the Nail on the Head

Bloomberg Media’s new campaign, “The Contextualist,” reexamines familiar idioms in a modern context.

Directed by the acclaimed director of “The Brutalist,” Brady Corbet, the campaign marks his commercial debut and lends his cinematic sensibility to three 30-second spots.

Each ad explores idioms like “a bird in the hand” and “the price of tea in China,” reinterpreting them through a business lens to highlight Bloomberg’s global reporting.

Created by Wieden+Kennedy New York, the campaign spans connected TV, digital out-of-home, audio, and social channels across key markets like the U.S., UK, and Singapore.

Coke Zero Goes Low Budget

Coke Zero Goes Low Budget

Yes, Coke Zero! Serve us nothing!

The brand’s latest campaign from Ogilvy India omits the product altogether.

Committed local actors pantomime through the motions of enjoying a “zero-calorie” Coke Zero. No cans, no script, no jingle.

“We realized that the biggest inspiration lies within the name Coke Zero,” said CCO Sukesh Nayak. “We designed a campaign that simply and effectively shows the Zero impact—by not showing the product at all. Sometimes it’s the simplest ideas that bring out the most magic.”

Snapchat’s New Chatty Ad Format

Snapchat’s New Chatty Ad Format

Snapchat has teamed up with Wendy’s to test Sponsored Snaps, a new conversational ad format that delivers branded messages directly to users’ chat inboxes.

The idea is that Sponsored Snaps will engage users seamlessly within their chat feed, feeling more like a friend’s message than a traditional ad.

Wendy’s campaign—featuring a playful message, “Can we yap now?” and “Saw this and thought of you <3″—generated 52 million impressions in just one day, making it the highest-viewed U.S. takeover ad in Snap’s Q4 Alpha test.

The campaign also boosted Wendy’s organic Snapchat following by 55% and drove nearly 12,000 clicks, resulting in a 17% increase in brand awareness.

In Q4 2024, Sponsored Snaps were the platform’s largest single-day reach product.

Rest in Peach

Rest in Peach

Lovingly, we gotta say Lipton Ice Tea’s April Fools’ stunt was the loser this year.

On March 18, the brand announced it was discontinuing its beloved Peach flavor, to which the masses and media replied “wtf” and “summer is ruined” and “what else even is there.”

Then, on March 19, the brand clarified that the announcement was an early April Fools joke… in mysterious first-person (“I’ve got your back!”). Ok, narcissist?

In the words of a top user comment, “I cried when you took it away, and I cried when you brought it back.”

We’re too delicate for this, Lipton! But for real, the brand’s unhinged persona strategy on IG does seem to be paying off.

1...101112...15

Insights

View All

Get the best daily marketing newsletter in your inbox