Meme Team

PODCAST · business

Meme Team

Meme Team dissects the marketing strategies creating breakout cultural moments. Host Sonia Baschez breaks down real campaigns, cultural moments, and marketing trends with other marketers. If you care about positioning, storytelling, or why the algorithm is acting weird again, this one's for you.

  1. 58

    Brand Reset vs. Brand Regret: Xbox's Nostalgia Win, Nike's Marathon Fail, & Netflix's TikTok Play

    Sonia sits down with Christina Garnett, author of Transforming Customer Brand Relationships and fractional Chief Community Officer, to break down Xbox's fan-first rebrand, Nike's marathon messaging disaster, Netflix's TikTok play, and Tim Cook's exit from Apple. The big thesis: nostalgia wins when it's authentic, and the most human brand wins.Xbox is doing what almost no brand has the guts to do: going backward on purpose. Asha Sharma lowered Game Pass prices (unheard of), ditched the Microsoft Gaming rebrand, brought back the Xbox name, and revealed a logo that screams early 2000s neon green sci-fi. The "This is an Xbox" campaign? Dead. Fans hated it because it stripped identity from the console itself. Now Xbox is leaning into heritage without making it kitschy, proving that listening to your core audience isn't optional.Nike, meanwhile, had a terrible week. Their Boston Marathon out-of-home campaign said "runners are celebrated, but walkers are tolerated," and the backlash was immediate. Competitive brands jumped in with inclusive messaging. Nike took it down fast, but the damage was done. The lesson: aspirational marketing works when it lifts people up, not when it makes them feel less than.Netflix is building a TikTok-style vertical video feed inside its mobile app, turning clips into a discovery engine. They're also integrating six brands directly into Point Season Two, formalizing product placement the way Adam Sandler has been doing for years. The clipping economy is here, and Netflix is making short-form content the front door to streaming.Tim Cook is stepping down from Apple, and MSN insiders say it's because he fumbled AI. His successor is John Turnus, head of hardware engineering, not software. Meanwhile, Elon Musk is suing Sam Altman over OpenAI's pivot from nonprofit to for-profit, and Ronan Farrow's New Yorker exposé painted Altman as a pathological liar. AI is reshaping leadership, and even CEOs aren't safe.We're talking about:Xbox's fan-first rebrand: Asha Sharma lowering Game Pass prices, killing the "This is an Xbox" campaign, bringing back the neon green logo, and why going back to early 2000s sci-fi aesthetics is a heritage play that actually worksPhil Spencer's 2022 Microsoft Gaming rebrand: Made Xbox bland and corporate, stripped identity from the console, and why reversing it was the right moveSocial identity theory in gaming: Xbox fanboys vs. Sony ponies, territorial allegiance to consoles, and why the "This is an Xbox" campaign was hated internally and externallyNostalgia as strategy: Pairing the new logo with the original bright green console, Ratatouille meme moments, and why Xbox is the first major brand to go full tilt into nostalgia without being kitschyNike's Boston Marathon disaster: "Runners are celebrated, but walkers are tolerated" out-of-home campaign, immediate backlash, competitive brands jumping in with inclusive messaging, and why aspirational marketing fails when it's condescendingAdidas winning the London Marathon: Two men broke the sub-two-hour marathon record wearing Adidas, Nike congratulating them but looked weak, and dog jerseys for World Cup teamsRunners' camaraderie: Distance runners treat everyone like fellow warriors, people stopping to help others cross the finish line, and why Nike forgot that most runners want to beat themselves, not each otherNetflix's TikTok play: Vertical video discovery feed inside the mobile app, hiring fan editors, and why clips are the front door to streaming nowNetflix product placement: Six brands integrated into Point Season Two, Adam Sandler's product placement playbook, and why this is better than adsMarvel's missed opportunity: Hiring fan editors, creating CliffsNotes shorts for every movie and TV showTim Cook leaving Apple: MSN insiders saying he fumbled AI, John Turnus (hardware engineering head) as successor, and why Apple didn't capitalize on Artemis II astronauts using iPhones in spaceHow AI is reshaping leadership at the topRevenge of the humanities: AI getting too expensive, human labor becoming cheaper, tech CEOs realizing tokens cost more than people, and why discernment is the skill AI can't replaceHuman-made as luxury: Project Hail Mary's behind-the-scenes content, Andor's practical sets vs. CGI, and why people want to see humans creating artStorytelling vs. AI: The Other Bennet Sister adaptation, Pride and Prejudice on Netflix casting concerns, and why AI can echo but can't create something entirely newPlus: Why founders are expected to tell their stories more and why the most human brand winsTimestamps00:00 Xbox's fan-first rebrand and nostalgia play15:00 Nike's marathon disaster and Adidas winning30:00 Netflix's TikTok feed and product placement strategy45:00 Tim Cook leaving Apple and the AI leadership crisis55:00 Human storytelling vs. AI and the revenge of the humanities

  2. 57

    Brand Reset vs. Brand Regret: Xbox's Nostalgia Win, Nike's Marathon Fail, & Netflix's TikTok Play

    Sonia sits down with Christina Garnett, author of Transforming Customer Brand Relationships and fractional Chief Community Officer, to break down Xbox's fan-first rebrand, Nike's marathon messaging disaster, Netflix's TikTok play, and Tim Cook's exit from Apple. The big thesis: nostalgia wins when it's authentic, and the most human brand wins. Xbox is doing what almost no brand has the guts to do: going backward on purpose. Asha Sharma lowered Game Pass prices (unheard of), ditched the Microsoft Gaming rebrand, brought back the Xbox name, and revealed a logo that screams early 2000s neon green sci-fi. The "This is an Xbox" campaign? Dead. Fans hated it because it stripped identity from the console itself. Now Xbox is leaning into heritage without making it kitschy, proving that listening to your core audience isn't optional. Nike, meanwhile, had a terrible week. Their Boston Marathon out-of-home campaign said "runners are celebrated, but walkers are tolerated," and the backlash was immediate. Competitive brands jumped in with inclusive messaging. Nike took it down fast, but the damage was done. The lesson: aspirational marketing works when it lifts people up, not when it makes them feel less than. Netflix is building a TikTok-style vertical video feed inside its mobile app, turning clips into a discovery engine. They're also integrating six brands directly into Point Season Two, formalizing product placement the way Adam Sandler has been doing for years. The clipping economy is here, and Netflix is making short-form content the front door to streaming. Tim Cook is stepping down from Apple, and MSN insiders say it's because he fumbled AI. His successor is John Turnus, head of hardware engineering, not software. Meanwhile, Elon Musk is suing Sam Altman over OpenAI's pivot from nonprofit to for-profit, and Ronan Farrow's New Yorker exposé painted Altman as a pathological liar. AI is reshaping leadership, and even CEOs aren't safe. We're talking about: Xbox's fan-first rebrand: Asha Sharma lowering Game Pass prices, killing the "This is an Xbox" campaign, bringing back the neon green logo, and why going back to early 2000s sci-fi aesthetics is a heritage play that actually works Phil Spencer's 2022 Microsoft Gaming rebrand: Made Xbox bland and corporate, stripped identity from the console, and why reversing it was the right move Social identity theory in gaming: Xbox fanboys vs. Sony ponies, territorial allegiance to consoles, and why the "This is an Xbox" campaign was hated internally and externally Nostalgia as strategy: Pairing the new logo with the original bright green console, Ratatouille meme moments, and why Xbox is the first major brand to go full tilt into nostalgia without being kitschy Nike's Boston Marathon disaster: "Runners are celebrated, but walkers are tolerated" out-of-home campaign, immediate backlash, competitive brands jumping in with inclusive messaging, and why aspirational marketing fails when it's condescending Adidas winning the London Marathon: Two men broke the sub-two-hour marathon record wearing Adidas, Nike congratulating them but looked weak, and dog jerseys for World Cup teams Runners' camaraderie: Distance runners treat everyone like fellow warriors, people stopping to help others cross the finish line, and why Nike forgot that most runners want to beat themselves, not each other Netflix's TikTok play: Vertical video discovery feed inside the mobile app, hiring fan editors, and why clips are the front door to streaming now Netflix product placement: Six brands integrated into Point Season Two, Adam Sandler's product placement playbook, and why this is better than ads Marvel's missed opportunity: Hiring fan editors, creating CliffsNotes shorts for every movie and TV show Tim Cook leaving Apple: MSN insiders saying he fumbled AI, John Turnus (hardware engineering head) as successor, and why Apple didn't capitalize on Artemis II astronauts using iPhones in space How AI is reshaping leadership at the top Revenge of the humanities: AI getting too expensive, human labor becoming cheaper, tech CEOs realizing tokens cost more than people, and why discernment is the skill AI can't replace Human-made as luxury: Project Hail Mary's behind-the-scenes content, Andor's practical sets vs. CGI, and why people want to see humans creating art Storytelling vs. AI: The Other Bennet Sister adaptation, Pride and Prejudice on Netflix casting concerns, and why AI can echo but can't create something entirely new Plus: Why founders are expected to tell their stories more and why the most human brand wins Timestamps 00:00 Xbox's fan-first rebrand and nostalgia play 15:00 Nike's marathon disaster and Adidas winning 30:00 Netflix's TikTok feed and product placement strategy 45:00 Tim Cook leaving Apple and the AI leadership crisis 55:00 Human storytelling vs. AI and the revenge of the humanities

  3. 56

    The Clipping Economy: Why Every Band, Brand & Startup Is Faking Organic Growth

    Sonia sits down with Jason Levin, founder of Memelord Technologies, to talk about: organic marketing isn't dead, it just got industrialized. And if the audience loves the music, does it matter how they found it? We're talking about: Geese psyop: Wired exposing Chaotic Good Projects running narrative campaigns for the band, TikTok backlash calling them an industry plant, and whether engineered ecosystems count as organic discovery Chaotic Good's playbook: Building networks of TikTok accounts to play background music, share live clips, engineer engagement circles, and the co-founder saying "we can drive impressions on anything at this point" Record labels using Memelord: Breaking new artists using videos, secretly putting music behind meme videos, and Jason getting calls from labels because breaking music is hyper-competitive right now (Suno is number one music app) Astroturfing 101: Fan pages on Twitter for artists are run by record label interns, phone farms, buying YouTube views, and how the music industry has always worked Historical context: MySpace bands figuring out the algorithm, Justin Bieber discovered on YouTube, Taylor Swift building relationships on Twitter/Instagram, and why TikTok is just the next iteration Brand fan accounts: Arby's Boys and Not Spirit Airlines pretending to be employees, getting more views than official brand accounts, and why saying things the brand can't say is more effective In-house influencers: Staples baddie doing ASMR videos for love of the game, companies realizing people want organic content from regular people, and hiring content creators to get personality without messing up the brand account Secondary pages strategy: Jason's been running fake pages for unicorns for a year, allows brands to take more risk, leverage humor without touching the main account, and why memes won't save you if you don't have a good business Follower economy is dead: TikTok proved followers don't matter, Twitter still follower-dominated but people complain about not getting access, and why early YouTubers with 3 million subscribers are asking "what do I do now" Clipping economy: Movie studios putting summaries of Netflix shows directly on TikTok, Jason investing 10 grand into clipping with 40,000 kids on WhatsApp earning $2 per thousand views, and creativity from the masses beating three in-house editors When clipping works vs. doesn't: Great for fame/virality/music/movies, doesn't work for startups (go into your CRM and book calls instead), and companies burning hundreds of thousands on clipping and failing Monoculture vs. summary content: Project Hail Mary/The Pit/Game of Thrones getting teaser trailers and fan cams to drive viewership, Netflix shows getting summaries because people won't spend 6-10 hours, and fan cams originally from fans trying to save shows Launch video bubble: Everyone copying Roy, agencies doing $10 million a year in launch videos and quote tweets, Jason spending $300 and getting 1.1 million views by editing himself, and why you don't need to spend 50 grand What is organic anymore: Finding creators who genuinely love your brand, helping customers create better UGC, in-house employees as subject matter experts, and Project Hail Mary's behind-the-scenes content outperforming Ryan Gosling fan cams Proving you're human: Gen Z assumes everything is AI, showing behind-the-scenes proves it's real, and why that's worth money in 2025 Jason's AMC Instagram Reels event: Rented out movie theater for $3K, 100+ people showed up including big influencers and investors, watched reels for an hour, biggest surprise was everyone booing when they realized something was an ad Meta reached out: Instagram columns team contacted Jason after the event, investors are ex-Meta, and why doing something unique gets companies coming to you Stop hosting dinners: Tech bros don't even eat (half are on Ozempic), Jason hosted ping pong event and bug horror stories for Halloween, and why the bank everyone copies is burning more cash per month than Jason has in his account Platform-specific creators: Twitter discovering social media managers, writing-first platforms (Twitter/LinkedIn) vs. video-first (Instagram/TikTok/YouTube), Jason's team split with Jovian on Instagram/YouTube and another on Twitter/LinkedIn Social media manager vs. creator: Morning Brew's in-house writers doing skits, journalists joining in-house teams but bringing their audience (CNBC example), and why they're freer as non-employees Timestamps 00:00 Geese psyop and manufactured virality 15:00 Brand fan accounts and in-house influencers 28:00 Clipping economy and when it works 40:00 Jason's AMC Instagram Reels event 52:00 Platform-specific creators and trial reels Guest: Jason Levin – Founder of Memelord Technologies, raised $3M to make memes, hit 100K ARR in 9 months with zero ad spend (@IAmJasonLevin on Twitter)

  4. 55

    Video-First Marketing: Hot Democrats, Literary AI Scandals + Zendaya's Fake Wedding

    Sonia sits down with Sophie Vershbow, a freelance journalist whose work has appeared in the New York Times, New York Magazine, and Esquire (and who spent six years doing social media for Random House), to break down how politicians are running creator playbooks and winning, OpenAI's podcast acquisition, and why competency porn is the new political content strategy. The big thesis: video is non-negotiable, and showing your work builds trust faster than promises. Zohran Mamdani is fixing potholes and shoveling snow on TikTok while other mayors hold press conferences no one watches. OpenAI bought TBPN to control their narrative after losing the Super Bowl ad war to Anthropic. A24 turned Zendaya's fake wedding into an immersive press tour that overshadowed her real one. And the New York Times cut ties with a book reviewer who used AI, proving craft still matters in elite industries. We're talking about: Zohran Mamdani's competency porn strategy: Fixing 100,000 potholes, paying New Yorkers to shovel snow, talking to street vendors about regulations, and why showing the work beats political theater Hot Democrats as the new political playbook: AOC, Graham Platner (Marine running for Maine Senate), Sam Forsag (smoke jumper in Montana), Bob Brooks (firefighter union president in Pennsylvania), and why being good on camera matters as much as policy David Plouffe's creator playbook thesis: Obama campaign strategist saying forward-facing video is mandatory for anyone running for office in 2026, and why the JFK vs. Nixon TV moment is now the TikTok president moment Why Mamdani's video strategy works: 10-minute shoots, biking around the city, calling into local shows, showing up on Fallon for three minutes, and treating digital as part of the job (not a bonus) Eric Adams vs. Mamdani: Fake daily schedule videos vs. real competency porn, and why New Yorkers want to see what their mayor actually does Artemis II astronauts as competency porn: Explaining their process in understandable terms without talking down to audiences, and why people are desperate to watch experts do their jobs well OpenAI buys TBPN: Sam Altman acquiring the tech podcast hosted by Jordy Hayes and John Coogan, winding down ad business, promising editorial independence, and whether they can criticize OpenAI after the Ronan Farrow profile Why OpenAI wanted TBPN: Tech layoffs blamed on AI, bad storytelling about AI replacing jobs, needing a megaphone to reach tech insiders first, and TBPN hosts not being journalists (no gotcha questions) Celebrity podcasts as safe spaces: LA Material article on why celebrities prefer podcasts over journalists, Amy Poehler vs. traditional press, Leonardo DiCaprio's first podcast on New Heights, and Aubrey Plaza talking about her husband's death Ronan Farrow's Sam Altman profile: New Yorker exposé on OpenAI's CEO, pathological liar allegations, Karen Hao's "The AI Hire" book covering similar ground, and whether Altman is the person we want leading AI AI in book publishing crisis: New York Times cuts ties with freelance reviewer Alex Preston for using AI, Shy Girl scandal, Curtis Brown literary agency concerned editors are putting manuscripts into ChatGPT, and why elite industries can't use AI like commodity brands Publishing's AI problem: Hachette not catching AI-generated text in a self-published bestseller, underpaid editors cutting corners, and why trust is sacred in literary spaces Human-made as a brand position: Apple's "shot through glass" ad, Oxford commas as AI tells, leaving typos in tweets to prove authenticity, and why craft is becoming a luxury differentiator A24's immersive wedding campaign for The Drama: Zendaya and Robert Pattinson fake wedding website, Boston Globe announcement, RSVP to Google Calendar, Vogue bridal spread, something old/new/borrowed/blue press tour looks, and doing wedding season publicly while Zendaya's real wedding stays private Why A24's strategy works: Small studio competing with Warner Bros and Netflix, making marketing so interesting fans talk about it, and creating immersive experiences (not just press junkets) Repurposing content across platforms: Twitter, Instagram, TikTok each getting different engagement moments, and why diversification is mandatory (not optional) Plus: Why Eli Lilly is sponsoring the New Yorker Festival, Final Destination 405 log truck Easter eggs, and Delve's YC compliance scandal Timestamps 00:00 Competency porn and hot Democrats: Zohran Mamdani's political playbook 15:00 OpenAI buys TBPN podcast 28:00 Ronan Farrow's Sam Altman profile 35:00 AI in book publishing: New York Times reviewer scandal and Shy Girl fallout 48:00 A24's immersive wedding campaign for The Drama with Zendaya and Robert Pattinson Guest: Sophie Vershbow – Freelance journalist (New York Times, New York Magazine, Esquire), former social media lead at Random House (@SVershbow on Twitter/Instagram)

  5. 54

    Optimism as Content Strategy: Project Hail Mary and Artemis II + How to Pitch the Media

    This week Sonia Baschez and guest Yury Molodtsov discuss Project Hail Mary, which crossed $300M globally in its second weekend — only a 32% drop from opening, which almost never happens. Sonia and Yury get into why space-as-adventure is having a cultural moment, what IMAX has quietly done to become one of the most powerful co-brands in film, and why optimism is a content strategy, not just a tone. Then: Delve. The YC-backed compliance startup sold SOC 2, HIPAA, and GDPR certifications to hundreds of startups — and now faces an anonymous Substack exposé alleging the audits were fraudulent. The CEO's response contradicted itself in a single statement. Investors quietly deleted their blog posts. Yury explains why shortcut-to-trust brands are the most fragile in any market, and why "AI-powered" is not a business model. After that: Sora is dead. OpenAI shut it down after six months, $1M a day in losses, and — somehow — one hour's notice to Disney. Yury's take on why OpenAI's Series B scrappiness and its $100B data center ambitions are fundamentally incompatible when you have institutional partners. And to close: Yury's State of Media Report 2026. The middle tier of tech media is getting squeezed out. Getting on TBPN is now harder than TechCrunch. And the funding round is the last thing a journalist wants to lead with. Sonia and Yury walk through what it actually takes to get coverage in 2026. 00:00 Project Hail Mary, Artemis II & Optimism as a Content Strategy 15:00 Delve: The $300M Compliance Catastrophe 28:00 Sora Is Dead (and Disney Found Out One Hour Before You Did) 33:30 State of Media 2026 & How to Actually Pitch Press Yury Molodtsov is a partner at MA Family, a PR firm behind campaigns for JetBrains, Miro, and Flipper Zero. He publishes the State of Media Report, an annual breakdown of how press coverage and the media industry are shifting.

  6. 53

    Manufacturing Demand: AI Backlash, Miley Cyrus + Beehiiv's Social Strategy

    AI is getting bad PR, and audiences are fighting back. 78% of Gen Z can now identify AI-generated images and will scroll past them, causing CTR to drop 40%. Hatchet Book Group pulled Shy Girl after weeks of speculation that sections were AI-generated, and readers went back to edit their positive reviews to call out the AI use. Meanwhile, Yahoo is having a moment on social—partnering with Cardi B to launch their new planner feature with a campaign called "FOMZ" (Fear of Missing Out on Something Important), proving that craft and celebrity endorsements still beat AI shortcuts. This week Sonia sits down with Chi Tuckerel (Head of Social at Beehive, formerly ran Dunkin's social) to break down why AI is losing trust with consumers, how Miley Cyrus willed the Hannah Montana 20th anniversary special into existence by promoting it before Disney even agreed to it (stealing a trick from Dolly Parton), and how Beehive is winning creators over from Substack and ConvertKit by elevating user stories instead of just product features. The big thesis: your voice is your competitive advantage—don't outsource it to AI. Gen Z is rejecting AI-generated content because it feels fake. Hatchet's author lost her book deal because readers felt betrayed. Yahoo brought Cardi B in to make their product relatable instead of leaning on AI marketing speak. Miley used her own platform to build hype and force Disney's hand. And Beehive's strategy is all about amplifying creators' voices, not just showcasing the top 1%. Craft, authenticity, and lived experience are what separate great marketing from AI slop. We're talking about: K-pop Demon Hunters Oscar win: Best Original Song and why McDonald's knows how to tap into culture at the right time Project Hail Mary's tech optimism: Record box office, science and technology as hopeful (not dystopian), and why audiences want to root for progress that benefits humanity Gen Z's immune response to AI: 78% can identify AI-generated images, CTR dropping 40%, companies switching back to real product photos, and why trust is the new brand risk Hatchet Book Group pulling Shy Girl: Weeks of online speculation about AI use, author admitting a contractor may have used AI without her knowledge, readers editing positive reviews to retract support, and why "the contractor did it" isn't a defense anymore Retroactive betrayal as a brand risk: Audiences changing their opinion after discovering AI involvement, Goodreads reviews being edited, and why transparency matters more than perfection AI's bad PR problem: Dario from Anthropic saying all professional jobs will be gone in five years, layoffs being blamed on AI (even when it's overhiring corrections), and why leadership needs to stop threatening workers with replacement Yahoo's Cardi B campaign: "FOMSI" (Fear of Missing Something Important), launching their planner feature, Cardi as a relatable ambassador, and why celebrity endorsements work when they're authentic (not just transactional) Why Yahoo is winning on social: bringing craft and humor back, and making people care about Yahoo for the first time in 10 years Marketing AI as a feature is boring and why younger audiences don't care about AI as a selling point Miley Cyrus willing the Hannah Montana special into existence: Taking Dolly Parton's advice to promote before it exists, using her star power to build hype on red carpets, showing Disney the fan reactions, and forcing them to greenlight it in under four months Promote before you build: Pre-announcing creates demand, reactions become data to pitch leadership, and Miley made it impossible for Disney to say no without a cost Celebrities going direct to fans: Miley using her platform to make the special happen, Kristen Stewart buying a theater in LA and doing a PR tour, Sarah Michelle Gellar explaining why the Buffy reboot got canceled, and why stars are bypassing traditional PR Beehiiv's social strategy: Chi running the account, interacting with every creator who tags them (not just the top 1%), celebrating milestones/birthdays/writing streaks, and using merch codes to reward community members LA Material launch on Beehiiv: pricing tiers named after LA highways (the 10, 101, 405), and why new media companies are choosing platforms that empower creators over traditional publishing models Timestamps 00:00 — K-Pop Demon Hunters: Oscar win + McDonald's collab 03:30 — AI's bad PR: Gen Z detecting AI images, Hachette's "Shy Girl" scandal 27:40 — Yahoo x Cardi B's FOMSI campaign 34:10 — Miley Cyrus wills the Hannah Montana special into existence 45:00 — Beehiiv's social strategy with Chi Thukral: Tyler's CEO persona, Washington Post response, LA Material launch Chi Thukral is Head of Social at Beehiiv. Find her: @ChiThukral on LinkedIn / Twitter / Instagram Follow Sonia: @SoniaBaschez Subscribe to Meme Team: YouTube: @MemeTeamPod | TikTok & Spotify: @MemeTeamPodcast

  7. 52

    Be Someone to Root For: Michael B. Jordan, Disney & Stripe

    Timothy Chalamet won zero Oscars this week. Sinners won four. Michael B. Jordan's humble acceptance speech reminded us what we're actually rooting for—humility, craft, and people who remember where they came from. Meanwhile, Chalamet's campaign flew too close to the sun, turning from "movie star we love" to "guy who thinks he's in the Venn diagram of cultural influencers." We break down what went wrong, why Disney's "Midnight Magic" cruise ad made us cry, and how Staples turned a 22-year-old print specialist into their biggest brand ambassador without fumbling the bag.This week Sonia sits down with Cynthia McGillis (Head of Marketing at Laribel) to talk through the Oscars' hidden lesson on authenticity, Disney's generational storytelling play, Home Depot accidentally becoming a family destination, and why the $99 AI CMO is a shortcut that misses the entire point of marketing. Plus: Stripe's comms hire proves storytellers are the new CMOs, and why brands that make you want to root for them are the ones building lasting equity.The big thesis: be the person (or brand) people want to root for. Chalamet lost the plot when he made it about himself instead of the work. Michael B. Jordan won by thanking his mom and the crew. Disney's betting on experiences and family moments that span generations. Staples sent roses to their viral employee instead of a cease and desist. And Stripe's hiring storytellers while startups think a $99 AI agent can replace a CMO. Humility, craft, and gratitude aren't just nice—they're competitive advantages.We're talking about:Oscars 2025: Why Michael B. Jordan and Ryan Coogler won (humility, crew shoutouts, paying dues), Chalamet's campaign going from beloved to backlash (Venn diagram comment, Kylie Jenner overshadowing Marty Supreme, losing the authenticity), and SAG Awards as the turning pointDisney's "Midnight Magic" cruise ad: Up piano music opening, three-generation storytelling (past/present/future), nostalgia without being purely nostalgic, and why companies with generational equity should remind customers of itDisney's family-first pivot: Bluey Disneyland experience, Bluey movie 2026, DisneyVerts (closed content ecosystem for kids vs. TikTok/YouTube Shorts), F1 partnership, ESPN Super Bowl integration, and ticket price reductions signaling recession or accessibility playStaples Baddie phenomenon: Kaden Roland (22-year-old print specialist) going viral with ASMR-style TikToks, Staples sending roses and making it official, employee-generated content done right, and why compensation matters (she's getting paid beyond her salary)Home Depot's accidental family moment: Moms taking kids to Home Depot as a "busy board," Saturday kids' craft hours, New York Post article, and the opportunity for Home Depot to amplify (please don't fumble this)Costco's IVF support: Helping members with fertility treatments, creating future customers, and companies staking territory as family-friendly vs. alienating parents$99 AI CMO disaster: Launching an AI agent to handle SEO, content, social, community, and Twitter auto-replies, Reddit/Hacker News spam bots, and why this misses the entire point of marketing (strategy, positioning, messaging, taste, judgment)Stripe's comms hire: Looking for storytellers with taste, judgment, and founder DNA, ability to design microsites/launch podcasts/write keynotes, and why craft beats AI slop (mini city campaign callback, using AI internally but marketing human connection)AI as a tool vs. AI as a crutch: Linear and Stripe using AI internally (minions fixing buttons, Slack bug tracking) but marketing craft and thoughtfulness, spray-and-pray doesn't work even with AI sparkle emoji, and why storytellers are the new CMOs (Wall Street Journal trend)Founder-led marketing: Why early-stage companies can't skip founder-led comms and sales, fractional marketers as a solution, and the importance of figuring out positioning/messaging/channels before hiring tactics-only rolesClaude Ambassadors vs. Pete fumble: Anthropic launching ambassador program after fumbling Pete (the first Claude ambassador who got a cease and desist, then hired by OpenAI), and how acknowledging mistakes builds trustTaylor Swift's gratitude playbook: Constantly thanking fans, special behind-the-scenes moments, and why humility keeps you relevant for 15+ years despite criticismPlus: Why Zendaya and Tom Holland's relationship feels wholesome vs. Chalamet/Kylie Jenner, Chevrolet's holiday ad callback, Target's gift-wrapping employee moment, and the Monster's Inc marketing theory (laughter beats screams)guest: Cynthia McGillis – Head of Marketing at Laribel (@CynthiaMcGillis on X, cynthiabellmcgillis.com)

  8. 51

    Word of Mouth 2.0: Claude, Twitter, Timothée & Sinners

    ChatGPT uninstalls surged 295% after the Department of Defense deal, the Pope told priests to stop using AI for sermons, and Netflix just opened its ad inventory to Amazon audiences. We break down all of it. Disney/Hulu's marketing mess, Claude's new community ambassadors program, Timothée Chalamet's hot take on ballet and opera becoming irrelevant, and Twitter's new exclusive threads feature. Plus filmmaker Nina Lee (@NinaSerafina) joins to go deep on the Sinners marketing campaign, from Ryan Coogler's viral IMAX/Kodak video to fan cams, crew spotlights, and the social strategy behind one of the year's biggest films. TIMESTAMPS 00:00 Intro 00:16 ChatGPT uninstalls surge + the Pope vs. AI sermons 02:43 Netflix opens ad inventory to Amazon audiences 04:29 Disney/Hulu marketing problems and new CEO 06:32 Claude's Ambassador Program and organic growth strategy 18:28 Timothée Chalamet vs. ballet and opera / Marty Supreme campaign 30:58 Twitter exclusive threads and creator monetization 38:30 Sinners marketing deep dive with Nina Lee 1:00:19 Outro ABOUT THE GUEST Nina Lee is an award-winning filmmaker and social media strategist who worked on campaigns for Sinners (dir. Ryan Coogler) and HBO Max. Find her on Twitter @NinaSerafina and Instagram @NinaSerafinaaaa. SUBSCRIBE AND FOLLOW YouTube: @MemeTeamPod Spotify & TikTok: @MemeTeamPodcast Host Sonia Baschez: @soniabaschez everywhere.

  9. 50

    5 Marketing Fails: Friend AI, OpenAI, AMC, McDonald's & H&M

    The McDonald's CEO posted a video eating the Big Arch burger and couldn't bring himself to swallow it. Sam Altman publicly backed Anthropic's stance against the Department of War, then swooped in to take the same contract hours later. And Friend AI released an ad so bleak it made loneliness look like a feature. This week was rough for brands. Sonia Baschez and guest Nic Allum (founder/CEO of Cultureland, an LA-based cultural strategy consultancy) break down five marketing moments that went sideways, what went wrong in each case, and the lessons brands should actually take from them. Timestamps: 0:00 Intro + Friend AI necklace ad controversy 5:30 OpenAI vs Anthropic: the Department of War contract and 1.5M user exodus 18:00 AMC Theatres premium seating backlash and the future of cinemas 32:00 McDonald's CEO Big Arch burger video fail (vs. Burger King's response) 42:00 H&M "New York" campaign: multi-generational casting and what's missing 49:30 Key takeaways and lessons for marketers About the guest: Nic Allum is the founder and CEO of Cultureland, a cultural strategy consultancy based in Los Angeles that helps brands understand and connect with cultural moments. Subscribe to The Meme Team Podcast for weekly breakdowns of the marketing strategies creating breakout cultural moments. Connect with Nic Allum: LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/nicallum | Substack: cultureland.substack.com Connect with Sonia Baschez: @SoniaBaschez everywhere | @MemeTeamPod on YouTube | @MemeTeamPodcast on Spotify and TikTok

  10. 49

    AI Agents are here: ChatGPT, Google Pomelli & OpenClaw

    ChatGPT launched ads this week and they're underwhelming. No personalized targeting, no memory integration, just basic in-line search ads that feel like Google in the 90s. Meanwhile, OpenClaw is setting the internet on fire as the first AI agent that actually works—controlling your browser, joining meetings, managing calendars, and doing everything a computer can do autonomously. Created by Austrian developer Peter Steinberger, it's the most famous open source project of all time with 200,000 GitHub stars and sparked a bidding war between Meta and OpenAI. It's getting normies excited about AI in a way nothing else has, with people buying Mac minis and naming them like employees. This week Sonia sits down with Martin O'Leary (head of marketing at Tap Payments, writer of Uncharted newsletter) to break down ChatGPT's boring ad rollout, Google's Pomelli Photo Shoot AI tool turning product snapshots into studio-quality marketing images, F1's Netflix tie-in with Damson Idris, AMC's AI film controversy, and why Spotify's Bad Bunny Billions Club Live event is a masterclass in using CRM data to reward actual fans instead of chasing new customers. The big thesis: craft still matters more than AI, but AI is abstracting complexity in ways that create new opportunities for builders. ChatGPT's ads prove OpenAI doesn't understand personalization yet. Google's Pomelli tool will make everyone's product photos look the same unless brands invest in distinctive assets. OpenClaw is bringing the future forward by letting one person build what used to require teams. And Spotify is doing what every brand sitting on CRM data should be doing: rewarding top fans with exclusive experiences instead of gating events for clout. We're talking about: ChatGPT ads: Why they're underwhelming, lack of memory integration, missing personalization opportunities, and how they compare to Facebook's data trove F1's Netflix crossover: Damson Idris (star of the F1 movie) appearing in the Driver to Survive promo, Apple taking over F1 broadcasting, and Carlos Sainz acknowledging Thea (the girl who created Sparkles the unicorn mascot) Google Pomelli Photo Shoot: AI tool turning basic product photos into studio-quality marketing images, targeting e-commerce sellers, integrating with Google Ads and Merchant Center, and competing with Amazon and Shopify Why AI product photography risks: Reverting to the mean, losing brand differentiation, DoorDash's AI food photos looking too clean, and why craft + prompting beats automation alone Real estate using AI: Justine Moore's observation that realtors are early adopters, creating multiple views of homes (day/night/sunset/party mode), and why it works (showing aspirational living without hiring drone operators) OpenClaw phenomenon: Austrian developer Peter Ticksteinberger's open source AI agent, 200,000 GitHub stars, bidding war between Meta and OpenAI, normies buying Mac minis as "employees," and why it's the first AI tool exciting people outside the tech bubble How OpenClaw works: Persistent memory across conversations, soul.md and identity files for customization, integrations with Slack/WhatsApp/Telegram/Gmail, and why it's a chief of staff + EA + COO combined Designing for agents vs humans: Websites optimized for AI scraping (pricing, specs, structured data) vs brand storytelling, billboards becoming prompts for humans to prompt their agents, and why real-world activations (Super Bowl, Olympics, World Cup) will matter more Spotify's Bad Bunny Billions Club Live: Invite-only Tokyo show for top listeners, leveraging Bad Bunny's 28 tracks in the Billions Club, rewarding actual fans instead of gating for clout, and why more brands should use their CRM data this way CRM data goldmines: Banks, cable companies, phone companies rewarding new customers over loyal ones, why discount codes only support churners or new users, and flipping the model to reward top fans with exclusive experiences AMC AI film controversy: Igor Farov's Thanksgiving short made with Gemini Nano Banana Pro, Screen Vision competition, backlash over AI-generated work in cinemas, and the craft vs livelihood debate (echoes of Snow White in 1937, animation not in Oscars until 2002, Luddites protecting livelihoods not rejecting technology) Sam Altman's bad week: Responding to Anthropic's Super Bowl ad with an essay (if you're explaining you're losing), saying humans need training too (tone-deaf in America), and why OpenAI needs a designated hater The designated hater thesis: Every company needs someone independent and well-paid whose only job is to say "do not release that crap" (McDonald's AI Christmas ad, Coca-Cola AI disaster, Mount Rushmore metaphor) Plus: Why F1 movie sequels are in production, Martin's theory that OpenClaw agents will game Spotify's top listener algorithm, and the Don Draper "I don't think about you at all" moment OpenAI should've had with Anthropic

  11. 48

    Zendaya's Fake Wedding, Frida Baby Backlash, & Free Groceries

    A24 built a full wedding website, a Boston Globe announcement, and an RSVP-to-your-Google-Calendar function to promote "The Drama" starring Zendaya and Robert Pattinson. It's the latest in a string of immersive campaigns that are making A24 the most interesting movie studio in marketing right now. We break down why it works, what other brands can learn from it, and why making it about the characters instead of the celebrities is the move. This week Sonia is joined by Trishla Oswal, AI and tech reporter at Adweek, to talk through A24's playbook, Frida Baby's sexual innuendo backlash, the Chase Sapphire x Whoop partnership, and Kalshi vs. Polymarket's competing free grocery stunts in NYC. Timestamps: 0:00 - Intro 0:17 - Ring/Amazon pulls Flock Safety integration after Super Bowl backlash 5:49 - Surveillance, privacy, and tech companies giving in to government pressure 7:00 - Fathom Entertainment's 2026 big screen classics lineup 8:42 - A24's immersive wedding campaign for "The Drama" 12:24 - World building in movie marketing and why A24 is beating Disney 21:46 - Frida Baby backlash: sexual innuendo meets baby products 27:25 - Reading the room and why silence makes it worse 31:00 - Chase Sapphire x Whoop partnership 35:25 - Is Whoop the right brand for Chase to partner with? 39:46 - Kalshi vs. Polymarket "grocery wars" in NYC 47:29 - Pop-up culture and prediction market regulation 50:06 - Takeaways and lessons learned 55:41 - Where to find Trishla Guest: Trishla Oswal is an AI and tech reporter at Adweek covering the intersection of technology, advertising, and culture.

  12. 47

    Super Bowl Ads Ranked: OpenAI vs Claude Beef, Levi's Genius, Coinbase's Fail with Dr. Marcus Collins

    Sam Altman publicly clapped back at Anthropic's Super Bowl attack ad. Only 7% of consumers even know what Claude is versus 73% for ChatGPT. So why did the market leader punch down? Dr. Marcus Collins, marketing professor at the University of Michigan and author of "For the Culture," compares it to the time Drake made the mistake of responding to Pusha T and got bodied with "The Story of Adidon." When you're the market leader, you don't engage the challenger. You're just giving them more light. This week we go through every major Super Bowl ad and figure out what worked, what flopped, and what it tells us about where marketing is headed. Marcus breaks down why Anthropic's ad felt like "they were in the group chat" while OpenAI's Codex spot was so abstract most people didn't even know it was OpenAI. We talk about Levi's making their first Super Bowl appearance in over 20 years with "Backstories," a spot that featured nothing but celebrity butts and the red tab. It somehow managed to be the only ad that night where the brand outshined the celebrities. Think Apple's iPod silhouette ads but for jeans. We get into Coinbase's Backstreet Boys karaoke spot that USA Today gave an F and had people literally flipping off their TVs. But Marcus makes a case that they "broke the brief," and that breaking the traditional Super Bowl ad format is the only way to cut through now that expectations have gotten impossibly high. We talk about Ring Camera's lost dog ad backfiring into a full surveillance state backlash (they're finding one dog per day, Marcus did the math), Google Gemini playing it safe with their closed ecosystem approach, and why movie trailers like Scream 7 and Netflix's surprise Cliff Booth spinoff cut through harder than most of the actual ads. We also get into my Monsters Inc theory of marketing. We're stuck on the scare floor right now, trying to make people angry or afraid to get engagement. But the laugh floor generates just as much energy. Marcus backs it up with Jonah Berger's research on why we share: biologically, anger and joy trigger the exact same physical response. It's the boring middle where people do nothing. We wrap with why monoculture events are expanding beyond the Super Bowl. The Olympics in LA in 2028, the World Cup this year, F1 races where AI companies like Google and Perplexity are already attaching themselves to teams. If you're a marketer or a founder trying to figure out where brand advertising is going, this one's for you. TIMESTAMPS: 0:00 - Intro 0:23 - OpenAI vs Anthropic/Claude: The Super Bowl AI Ad War 4:10 - Market Leaders vs Challengers: The Drake vs Pusha T Rule 18:27 - The Monsters Inc Theory of Marketing 24:25 - Levi's "Backstories": Celebrity Butts and the Red Tab 32:00 - Coinbase Backstreet Boys: USA Today's Only F 40:36 - Google Gemini: Safe Play or Missed Opportunity? 44:57 - Ring Camera: How to Accidentally Advertise a Surveillance State 56:54 - Super Bowl Movie Trailers: Who Showed Up and Who Didn't 1:10:27 - Takeaways: Break the Brief & the Future of Monoculture Events ABOUT THE GUEST: Dr. Marcus Collins is a marketing professor at the University of Michigan School of Business, bestselling author of "For the Culture: The Power Behind What We Buy, What We Do, and Who We Want to Be," and co-host of the podcast "From the Culture." He's spent his career making ads for brands like Nike and Apple, and was named one of Advertising Age's 40 Under 40. Follow him: @marctothec

  13. 46

    Brand Wars: Anthropic vs OpenAI, Coke vs Pepsi + Disney Goes All-In on Parks

    Sonia sits down with Jiya Jaisingh (fractional marketer and communicator with 10+ years in health and social impact) to break down Anthropic's $7M Super Bowl ad announcing they won't run ads, Pepsi's Coca-Cola bear stunt, Disney's CEO transition betting on parks over content, and why wellness brands are crashing the junk food holiday. The big thesis: brand wars are back, and they're funnier than ever. Anthropic spent millions to dunk on OpenAI's ad strategy with satirical "what we won't do" spots. Pepsi dragged Coke's polar bear (and AI Christmas ad) through the mud with craft storytelling and a Coldplay cheating meme. Disney chose a parks CEO over a content executive, signaling experiences are the new moat. And Kellogg's spending Super Bowl money on Raisin Bran fiber jokes proves GLP-1s are reshaping food marketing. We're talking about: Anthropic's "Claude Cerebral" Super Bowl ads: $7-8M spend to announce they're NOT doing ads (with a caveat), satirical AI prompts serving cringey sponsors (height-boosting insoles, cougar dating apps), and Dr. Dre's "The Difference" as the ultimate OpenAI diss track Why Anthropic's positioning themselves as the ethical AI: Mac vs. PC energy, "we're not like OpenAI" messaging, luxury creative audience targeting, and the transparency play ("if we change our mind, we'll tell you") Pepsi's Coke polar bear heist: No AI (direct shot at Coke's AI Christmas disaster), Coldplay cheating meme integration, therapist couch reveal, craft storytelling over AI slop, and reviving the Pepsi Challenge Brand wars as positioning strategy: Anthropic vs. OpenAI, Pepsi vs. Coke, crowded markets forcing brands to stake territory by calling out what they won't do Wellness invades Super Bowl: Kellogg's Raisin Bran (first Super Bowl ad in 15 years), William Shatner poop jokes, GLP-1s reshaping food trends, fiber searches up 70%, and gut health as the new protein Why Raisin Bran is risky: Celebrity ads = brand recall vs. product recall, proof vs. promise (Shatner's health as evidence fiber works), and competing with protein cereal startups Disney's CEO pick signals experience-first future: Josh Damaro (parks CEO) over Dana Walden (content president), Disney Experiences worth $205B vs. content's $47B, Bluey Disneyland announcement, and AI as "always second to human creativity" Disney's luxury pivot: Pricing families out vs. widening access, competing with ski trips and Europe vacations, perpetual engagement loops (Moana movie → doll → park → hotel → Moana 2), and Netflix can't build theme parks in decades Stripe Press's "Maintenance of Everything" rollout: Patches, rags, Kintsugi-inspired book design, influencer gifting, and craft as marketing moat Sydney Sweeney's Siren rebrand disaster: Sweetgreen logo vibes, "is it Siren or Third?" confusion, bra fit criticism, detached "no apology" messaging, and men vs. women reading the launch completely differently Granola's rebrand miss: Vomit green, Dreamcast swirl logo, "we spent hours on this" admission backfiring, and rebranding too early when traction is just building Plus: Why Monster's Inc marketing theory (laughter beats screams) is dominating Super Bowl 2025, Budweiser's nostalgia play, and how Ro's Serena Williams ad fits the GLP-1 wellness trend guest: Jiya Jaisingh – Fractional marketer and communicator with 10+ years in health and social impact (LinkedIn: Jiya Jaisingh, website: jiyajaisingh.com) marketing takeaways: Use competitor missteps as positioning opportunities (Anthropic leveraging OpenAI's ads, Pepsi dunking on Coke's AI) Staking what you won't do is a position in crowded markets (Anthropic's "no ads" stance attracts luxury creative users) Transparency buys goodwill for future pivots (Anthropic's "we'll tell you if we change" caveat) Humor beats rage bait—Monster's Inc theory wins (Anthropic, Pepsi, Raisin Bran all going comedic) Craft storytelling cuts through AI slop (Pepsi's real polar bear vs. Coke's AI disaster) Disrupt category expectations (wellness brands crashing junk food's biggest event) Proof beats promise in health marketing (Shatner's vitality vs "fiber will help you") Experiences are undervalued brand moats (Disney betting $205B parks business over $47B content) Perpetual engagement loops = no off-ramps (Disney's Moana universe across movies, parks, merch, hotels) Know your ICP before launching (Sydney Sweeney's Siren confused men and women, no clear target) Don't rebrand when you're just gaining traction (Granola's vomit green misstep) Cultural trends reshape categories fast (GLP-1s forcing food brands to pivot to wellness)

  14. 45

    Video First Strategy: Substack TV, Heated Rivalry, Mamdani's Competency Porn, & The California Post

    Sonia sits down with Mark Stenberg (Adweek senior media reporter) to break down the Oscars' hidden messages, Substack's pivot to video, Zohran Mamdani's PR blitz, and the New York Post's California expansion—all asking the same question: when do you listen to your core audience, and when do you bet on what's next? The big thesis: video is eating everything, but evolution kills platforms faster than brands. Substack's adding TV despite writer backlash. Mamdani's turning local government into video content. The Post is importing tabloid energy to LA. Timothée Chalamet's Oscar nom proves sustained campaigns beat one-off moments. And all of them are wrestling with the same tension—preserve your identity or chase growth. We're talking about: Oscars 2025: Timothée Chalamet's Marty Supreme nomination, A24's $120M+ domestic box office record, why Hollywood insiders are rewarding movie marketing and indie craft, and F1's technical innovation nods Apple's awards strategy: Why technical mastery (not just storytelling) is their differentiator from Netflix and Warner Bros IMAX theater expansion: Do premium experiences justify higher ticket prices? Is dynamic pricing the solution? Southwest's brand suicide: Eliminating open seating and free checked bags after private equity buyout, losing their only differentiator against United/Delta, and the budget airline death spiral (Spirit bankruptcy) Substack TV launch: Shifting from "home for long-form writing" to "home for the best long-form work," TikTok-style feed, video posts, and why they're speedrunning the creator monetization playbook Substack's ad problem: December 2025 sponsored ads rollout, creators managing their own sponsors, and why video without monetization makes no sense (YouTube wins by default) Platform vs. brand evolution: Why writers are mad at Substack for adding video, but the New York Post gets celebrated for expanding to California Heated Rivalry phenomenon: HBO's queer hockey romance hitting escape velocity, straight men posting TikTok reactions, stars carrying the Olympic torch in Milan, and why escapism + representation + great timing = cultural moment Why Heated Rivalry works: Intersecting queer romance + professional hockey, female and queer audiences as jet fuel for pop culture, straight male viewership driven by emotional intelligence and sports authenticity, and NHL welcoming women to games (Taylor Swift/Travis Kelce playbook) Zohran Mamdani's video blitz: Snow removal, public bathroom openings, pre-K classes, sanitation content, Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon, and why competency porn beats political theater Crisis comms as brand building: Over-communicating and using expected failure as a spotlight on city employees New York Post's California expansion: Eight-week rollout, billboards in SF and LA, Yeasty Boys food truck wraps, coffee sleeve promos, and whether conservative tabloid energy translates to Silicon Valley's rightward shift Media landscape shifts: LA Times dominance threatened, Page Six celebrity gossip tailored for Hollywood, Dodgers welcoming the Post (owner is mega Trump donor), and whether this is a profit play or a political mouthpiece Why the Post's rollout missed: Marketing written by New Yorkers for Californians, lack of video strategy, and whether readers want California coverage or New York politics refracted through conservative lens Plus: Why Monster's Inc is a marketing metaphor (laughter beats screams) Guest: Mark Stenberg – Senior media reporter at Adweek, author of On Background newsletter (@markstenberg3 on all platforms) Marketing takeaways: Video is non-negotiable—Substack, Mamdani, and HBO all betting on it (even when core audiences resist) Platforms face more friction than brands when evolving (Substack writers vs. New York Post expansion reception) Sustained campaigns beat one-off moments (Timothy Chalamet's months-long Oscar push paid off) Competency porn works—showcase the work being done, not just the outcomes (Mamdani's snow removal TikToks) Over-communicate during crises to turn expected failure into brand wins (Mamdani using attention to spotlight city employees) Escapism + representation + timing = cultural phenomenon (Heated Rivalry during hockey season, Winter Olympics, geopolitical bleakness) Female and queer audiences are pop culture jet fuel—don't ignore them (NHL learning from NFL's Taylor Swift moment) Brand differentiation is sacred—don't sacrifice it for short-term revenue (Southwest losing open seating) Positive emotions are more sustainable than rage bait (Monster's Inc Marketing Theory) If you're expanding a brand, preserve voice but tailor execution (New York Post's California challenge)

  15. 44

    X Is Buying What Webflow, Netflix & DoorDash Are Earning: Attention

    Sonia sits down with Marissa Kraines (VP of brand marketing at Webflow, 12 years at Salesforce) to break down why Twitter's $1 million long-form content prize screams desperation, how Webflow turned AI's biggest flaw into a viral campaign, Netflix's tarot-themed 2026 slate reveal, and why DoorDash is skipping the Super Bowl to bet on social-first strategy. The big thesis: attention isn't enough—you need the right attention, in the right format, at the right time. Twitter's chasing Substack instead of fixing moderation. Webflow's satirizing AI hallucinations with a punchable-faced character. Netflix is turning celebrities into content creators and building experiential tarot pop-ups. DoorDash is ditching the $7M Super Bowl ad for integrated social campaigns. All of them are fighting for the same thing: sustained engagement, not fleeting impressions. We're talking about: Twitter's $1M long-form content prize: Why it's the wrong pivot, UK revenue down 58%, Substack already owns this space, and why moderation (not content length) is the real advertiser concern Webflow's AI Guy campaign: Personifying flawed AI with a "punchable face," satirizing hallucinations and LLM jazz, why it's social-first, and how they're building a liminal world of characters (not just one-off ads) Netflix's tarot campaign: Teyana Taylor's 4-minute film featuring 10 show worlds (Bridgerton, Avatar, Stranger Things), 104M owned social impressions, Grand Central pop-up, custom tarot cards, and capitalizing on the Secret 9th Episode conspiracy DoorDash skipping Super Bowl 60: Strategic pivot to social campaigns, competitors Uber Eats and Instacart running spots, and why $7M ads are door openers (not destinations) unless you nail the second-screen experience Why Twitter's identity crisis is killing it: Long-form content doesn't fit the platform, threads hit 400M users, and Elon's algorithm whims are driving creators to Substack Webflow's casting process: Finding Richie Moriardi (CBS's Ghosts), the "punchable face" brief, and why improv masters make better brand characters than scripted actors Netflix's multi-touch strategy: Why the hero film is just the opener—experiential pop-ups, custom merch, and social extensions are where the ROI lives Super Bowl ads as conversation starters: Serova's Michael Cera campaign, Instacart's Dumois teasers, and why the drum beat matters more than the 30-second spot World-building as brand strategy: Salesforce's Astro and Cody characters, Webflow's liminal space, and why personification creates community (not just awareness) Plus: Why Claude is the ethical AI people are loyal to, how Stripe and Ramp are stealing movie marketing playbooks, and why craft beats AI slop when you're trying to stand out marketing takeaways: Know your brand identity—don't chase trends that don't fit your platform (Twitter forcing long-form is a miss) Satirize the pain point, don't ignore it (Webflow's AI Guy makes hallucinations relatable) Build worlds, not one-off campaigns (Salesforce's Astro/Cody, Webflow's liminal space, Netflix's tarot universe) Integrated strategies beat isolated tactics—hero video is the opener, not the destination Super Bowl ads are door openers—you still need the second-screen social strategy to win Use strategic decisions as marketing moments (DoorDash announcing they're skipping Super Bowl got them more press) Steal from other industries, not your competitors (Ramp's CFO in a box = Severance's Apple TV stunt) Personify your product's flaws to make them relatable (AI Guy is overconfident and wrong, just like real AI) Experiential + merch = lasting brand equity (Netflix's tarot cards, Timothy Chalamet's jackets) Listen to your audience—they're telling you what they want (Twitter users want moderation, not newsletters)

  16. 43

    The Authenticity Playbook: Netflix, DoorDash, Shopify, Tailwind

    Sonia sits down with Yury Molodtsov (partner at MA Family) to break down Netflix's content strategy pivot, DoorDash's crisis response masterclass, and how Tailwind CSS turned a $2M revenue crisis into a community-funded turnaround—all without asking for help. We're talking about: Netflix's power play: Matt Damon and Ben Affleck's viral interview, the historic profit-sharing deal for 1,200 crew members, and why Netflix is betting on video podcasts (Ringer, Barstool, iHeart exclusives) DoorDash's fake scandal: How an anonymous post alleging "desperation scores" went viral, why people believed it, and how CEO Tony Xu's rapid-fire response across all channels killed the narrative before it became a meme Shopify's UCP announcement: Toby Lütke going direct on Twitter to explain Universal Commerce Protocol, using his MRI scan tweet to prove he's deep in AI, and why founder-led comms beats corporate accounts Tailwind CSS's $2M turnaround: How AI killed 35% of their revenue, the founder's authentic podcast confession, and why Google, Vercel, and others stepped in to sponsor them without being asked Why Netflix is diversifying into podcasts, using celebrities as content creators, and positioning itself as YouTube's biggest competitor (not HBO or Disney) The precedent-setting artist equity deal: How Affleck and Damon forced Netflix to share real numbers for the first time, and what it means for Hollywood's future AI-generated evidence as the new crisis threat: Fake Uber Eats badges, 18-page science papers, and why journalists are struggling to verify leaks in the AI era Building in public when things go wrong: Why authenticity during failure builds more trust than celebrating wins Plus: Why Leonardo DiCaprio is doing podcasts now and how Emily Henry (romance author) became Netflix's secret marketing weapon guest: Yury Molodtsov – Partner at MA Family (@y_molodtsov on Twitter/X, molodtsov.me) marketing takeaways: Own the asset, don't rent attention (Netflix using celebrities, authors, podcast hosts as content creators) Move fast in a crisis—DoorDash killed the fake scandal in hours by going CEO-first across all channels Founder accounts are superior to corporate accounts (Toby's MRI tweet became a trend, Shopify's UCP announcement got more reach) Authenticity during failure builds trust (Tailwind's podcast confession turned into $2M in sponsorships) Infrastructure plays beat feature wars (Shopify positioning as the rails for AI commerce, not building another assistant) Manage reputation proactively—people will believe negative stories about you if you've burned goodwill AI-generated evidence is the new crisis threat (fake badges, fake papers—journalists can't verify leaks the old way anymore) If you ask for money you get advice, if you ask for advice you get money (Tailwind didn't ask, community showed up anyway) Building in public works both ways—share the struggles, not just the wins Chapters 00:00:00 Welcome and Introducing Yuri Molotsov from M.A. Family 00:00:19 Netflix's Content Diversification: The Matt Damon and Ben Affleck Interview Strategy 00:03:03 Netflix's Groundbreaking Profit-Sharing Deal with Artist Equity 00:05:06 Netflix Transparency and the Hollywood Power Dynamics Shift 00:07:55 Content Marketing Lessons: Storytelling Over Product Features 00:09:49 Netflix's Big Bet on Video Podcasts 00:16:31 The DoorDash Fake Scandal: When AI-Generated Evidence Goes Viral 00:17:25 DoorDash's Crisis Response and the Reputation Problem 00:18:46 AI-Generated Misinformation and the Future of Corporate Scandals 00:25:35 Shopify's Universal Commerce Protocol: Toby Lutke's AI Commerce Vision 00:26:56 The Power of CEO-Led Communications: Toby Lutke's Twitter Strategy 00:31:29 Tailwind's Two Million Dollar Turnaround Story 00:33:18 Authenticity as a Viral Strategy: When Vulnerability Becomes Strength 00:37:16 Building in Public: The Good, The Bad, and The Authentic 00:40:45 Key Takeaways: Content Ownership, Reputation Management, and Authenticity 00:00-14:25 — Netflix's content play: Matt Damon/Ben Affleck interview, profit-sharing deal for 1,200 crew, video podcast strategy (Ringer, Barstool, iHeart), Emily Henry as marketing asset 14:25-32:26 — DoorDash fake scandal: Anonymous "desperation score" post, CEO Tony Xu's crisis response, AI-generated evidence, why people believed it 32:26-44:10 — Shopify's UCP announcement: Toby Lütke going direct on Twitter, MRI scan tweet, agentic commerce bet, founder-led comms vs corporate accounts 44:10-end — Tailwind CSS $2M turnaround: AI killing 35% revenue, founder's authentic podcast moment, Google/Vercel sponsorships, building in public during failure, key takeaways

  17. 42

    From Rage Bait to Real Feelings: Grok, Polymarket, Chevrolet & Stranger Things

    Sonia and Christina Garnett break down why 2026 might finally be the year marketing moves past rage bait and back toward empathy, craft, and emotional intelligence. They cover Grok's non-consensual AI image scandal, Polymarket's refusal to pay out on Venezuela invasion bets, Chevrolet's tear-jerking holiday ad that went viral, the Stranger Things finale conspiracy theories, and why Cadillac F1 is putting their drivers on Hot Ones instead of traditional press tours. The big thesis: attention-at-any-cost marketing is dying. Rage bait burns goodwill (see: Cluely, Friend AI). Empathy wins. Nostalgia works. Craft beats AI slop. And brands that give audiences a voice—not just content to scroll past—are the ones building lasting equity. We're talking about: Grok's AI image scandal: non-consensual deepfakes of women and children, Elon's tone-deaf response, and why the UK government had to step in Polymarket refusing to pay users who bet on Venezuela invasion—and what it reveals about who gets to decide "truth" Chevrolet's "Memory Lane" holiday ad: 778K YouTube views, organic TikTok reactions, and why nostalgia + empathy = sustainable brand love Stranger Things finale backlash: Duffer Brothers leaving plot holes, fans writing their own endings, and the Game of Thrones-level risk of letting down your community Cadillac F1's Hot Ones strategy: using YouTube influencers over traditional press to reach younger American audiences (5-10M views per episode) Why gambling proliferation is a societal red flag: athletes getting harassed, people betting on recessions, and dopamine addiction replacing empathy The pendulum swing coming in 2026: analog, craft, experiential, and emotional marketing replacing AI slop and Machiavellian tactics Monsters Inc as a marketing metaphor: laughter (positive emotion) generates more sustainable energy than screams (rage bait) Plus: Why Netflix theatrical windows matter, how Timothée Chalamet's Marty Supreme campaign proved experiential beats traditional ads, and Christina's plea for Budweiser Clydesdales at the Super Bowl. guest: Christina Garnett – Author of Transforming Customer Brand Relationships, community strategist, fandom marketing expert (@ThatChristinaG on Twitter/LinkedIn/Threads) guest perspective: Christina brings deep fandom + community lens—talks Stranger Things conspiracy theories, why rage bait conditions audiences for the worst behavior, gambling as dopamine farming, and the sociological shift from treating humans as NPCs to rebuilding empathy. She's bullish on analog, nostalgic, and emotionally intelligent marketing and wants brands to stop rewarding bad actors. marketing takeaways: Empathy beats rage bait for long-term brand equity (Chevy's nostalgia ad vs. Clueless burning goodwill) Positive emotions are more sustainable than negative ones (Monsters Inc laughter is better than screams) Create annual traditions people look forward to (Chevy holiday ads, Budweiser Clydesdales, Stripe activations) Go where your audience is—not where you want them to be (Hot Ones, podcasts, YouTube over the traditional press) Personality beats credentials (Cadillac letting Bottas wear American Speedos, F1 drivers on Hot Ones) Fandom is co-creation—give your audience a voice or risk losing them (Stranger Things fan theories, AO3 rewrites) Craft, analog, and experiential marketing cut through AI slop (theatrical experiences, merch drops, breadcrumb campaigns) Don't let the loudest voices pivot your whole product—but listen enough to build buy-in Month-long campaigns beat one-day launches (movie promo playbook applies to tech: teasers, influencers, premieres, method dressing) 00:00-06:38 — Yellow Card x Good Charlotte collab, millennial nostalgia, 21 Pilots TikTok lore, analog comeback 06:38-23:35 — Grok AI scandal: non-consensual deepfakes, child exploitation, Elon's bikini response, UK government intervention 23:35-32:26 — Polymarket refusing Venezuela invasion payouts, who decides truth, gambling as recession indicator 32:26-44:10 — Chevrolet \"Memory Lane\" ad: 778K views, nostalgia + empathy, annual traditions, McDonald's vs. Chevy 44:10-55:25 — Stranger Things finale backlash: Duffer Brothers leaving plot holes, Vecna Lives conspiracy, fandom co-creation risks 55:25-end — Cadillac F1 Hot Ones strategy, Leonardo DiCaprio on New Heights, month-long campaigns, takeaways + where to find Christina

  18. 41

    My Top 5: Marty Supreme, Mini Cities, Morse Code, and More

    Every week on The Meme Team Podcast, we break down what worked, what didn't, and why people cared. This year had too many good campaigns to just list—so we're doing an awards show. In this episode, Sonia and the team cover: Marty Supreme / Timothée Chalamet (w/ Mark Stenberg) – The lookalike contest, the Statue of Liberty stunt, and meta-marketing done right. Stripe's Black Friday Mini City (w/ Kushaan Shah & Amanda Natividad) – A handmade, 8-foot miniature city with 15 buildings, live-streamed over 24 hours. Why craft beats AI. Morgan Wallen's Tour Announcement (w/ Cristin Culver) – Morse code Easter eggs, coordinated stadium social posts, and a masterclass in knowing your fans. Zohran Mamdani's NYC Scavenger Hunt (w/ Amanda Natividad & Martin O'Leary) – How a political campaign got 2,000+ people to show up for chai and a selfie. Astronomer + Gwyneth Paltrow (w/ Amanda Natividad) – How Maximum Effort turned a kiss cam disaster into a viral comeback. Plus: Why Ramp and Stripe are making fintech exciting, what Coca-Cola got wrong with their AI Christmas ad, and the through-line across every great campaign this year—getting people to participate, not just watch. 0:00 – Intro: Why we're doing an awards show 1:35 – Marty Supreme / Timothée Chalamet 17:12 – Stripe's Black Friday Mini City 32:26 – Morgan Wallen's Stadium Tour Rollout 41:18 – Zohran Mamdani's Scavenger Hunt 44:10 – Astronomer + Gwyneth Paltrow

  19. 40

    Amazon vs. Sephora: $99 Advent Calendars

    Sonia sits down with Julie Fredrickson (managing partner at Chaotic Capital) to dissect the Advent calendar wars—and what Amazon's massive, perfectly-packaged K-beauty box says about the future of retail, beauty merchandising, and who's winning the tastemaker race. We're talking about: Why Amazon shipped a $99 Advent calendar in custom foam inserts (and what that signals about their beauty ambitions) The end of de minimis tax and how it's reshaping K-beauty imports, counterfeits, and brand trust Sephora's loyalty program collapse: why 500-point rewards vanished and millennials are jumping ship Costco's rotating J-beauty drops, Trader Joe's SKU ruthlessness, and the rise of "box season" Amazon vs. Sephora vs. Saks Fifth Avenue: who's nailing the unboxing experience (and who's phoning it in) How Amazon's using logistics mastery to court American beauty brands—and whether they'll share customer data The millennial beauty gap: why there's no one merchandising to women in their 30s and 40s Gen Z's plastic surgery trend, buccal fat removal regrets, and whether "aggressively natural" is the next aesthetic shift Plus: Why full-size beats samples, how TikTok unboxings are the new product review, and what gourmand fragrances have to do with Ozempic. guest: Julie Fredrickson – Managing Partner at Chaotic Capital, retail expert, beauty substack writer (@almost_media on Twitter/X, nicepackaging.substack.com) guest perspective: Julie brings deep retail and merchandising expertise—breaks down SKU strategy, 3PL logistics, counterfeit challenges, and why Amazon hiring Christine Beauchamp (former Ann Taylor) signals they're serious about taste. She's skeptical of Sephora's down-market shift and bullish on craft packaging as brand positioning. marketing takeaways: Packaging = brand promise (Amazon's custom inserts telegraphed \"we're luxury-ready\") Curation beats assortment (12 full-size K-beauty products is better than 24 Sephora samples) Loyalty programs die when you pull rewards from top spenders (Sephora's 500-point disaster) Use operations as marketing (Amazon's 3PL pitch to beauty brands = trust signal) Sampling tiers matter: trial vs mini vs full-size creates different conversion paths TikTok unboxings are your real product reviews—design for that moment Tastemaker positioning requires constant curation (Sephora lost it, Amazon's claiming it)

  20. 39

    Substack ads, Storytelling Over Slop, & Kim K. In Fortnite

    Sonia Baschez sits down with Hailey Allen (creative strategist at neuemotion) to dissect the marketing wins and fails making waves right now—from AI slop ruining brand perception to why companies are suddenly hiring "chief storytellers." We're talking about: Why McDonald's pulled their AI ad in 24 hours (and why Disney chose the worst week to announce their OpenAI deal) "Slop" being named word of the year and what that says about 2025 Substack launching sponsorships after years of being ad-free—is the dream over? Pinterest Predicts 2026 vs. Pantone's boring white color choice The viral WSJ article about chief storytellers and why AI can't replace human narrative A24's fake engagement announcement and Spielberg's cryptic Times Square billboard Kim Kardashian x Fortnite: actually genius or completely unhinged? Plus: actionable takeaways for marketers trying to cut through the noise. 00:40 – McDonald's AI Ad Disaster & Disney-OpenAI Partnership 03:46 – 2025 Words of the Year (Slop, Rage Bait, Parasocial) 05:12 – J.Crew Pop-Up & the Rise of Experiential Marketing 07:38 – Substack Launches Ads: The End of Ad-Free Newsletters? 19:22 – 2026 Trend Reports: Pinterest Predicts vs. Pantone's Flop 24:30 – Chief Storytellers: Why Companies Are Hiring for "Vibes" 36:30 – Movie Marketing Masterclass: A24's Fake Engagement & Spielberg's Mystery Billboard 41:51 – Kim Kardashian x Fortnite: Genius or Chaos? 49:55 – Marketing Takeaways Recap

  21. 38

    “Opt-In” Marketing: How Granola, Nvidia & Percy Jackson Won

    This episode hits on five major marketing trends playing out rn. starts with F1's american takeover—Cadillac's super bowl livery reveal is perfectly timed with Apple's new broadcast deal to capture US audiences who've been waiting for a team that actually leans into being american. they also break down the wholesome carlos sainz unicorn helmet story that shows how user-generated content and ongoing storylines can build real fan engagement when you're not just extracting value from your audience. The spotify wrapped vs granola crunched comparison is the meat of it—spotify's getting 500M shares but losing trust bc people think the data's cooked and taylor swift's juicing the numbers. granola launched a privacy-first year-end review that actually felt accurate and personal, proving that substance beats viral metrics for long-term brand equity. they tie this into nvidia hiring a merch director and palantir's cult following, arguing that founder personality + quality merch = walking billboards that signal community membership (the "if you know you know" factor). Closes on rage bait marketing being a dead-end strategy despite easy engagement. paul graham called it scammer shit, and they show how companies like clueless and friend ai burned goodwill chasing attention instead of building product. the counterpoint: wholesome marketing, craft, and participatory events (percy jackson's fountain billboard, stripe's mini-city) are winning bc people are exhausted from doom scrolling. big thesis: attention economy thinking misses that not all attention is equal—optimize for trust and positive emotion, not just impressions. F1 Marketing Moves (00:01 - 09:14): Cadillac F1's Super Bowl livery reveal strategy, Apple TV's F1 deal, and Carlos Sainz's wholesome unicorn helmet story Spotify Wrapped vs Granola Crunch (14:04 - 26:37): Why Spotify's losing trust while Granola nails year-end reviews Merch as Marketing Strategy (29:24 - 43:00): Nvidia hiring a merch director, Palantir's cult following, and why founder personality matters Out of Home Evolution (44:16 - 52:30): Percy Jackson's fountain billboard and creating participatory marketing events The Rage Bait Problem (55:25 - 1:22:48): Paul Graham weighs in, why companies like Clueless are burning goodwill for engagement

  22. 37

    Stripe and Shopify Crushed Black Friday & Cyber Monday

    Sonia, Amanda, and guest Kushaan Shah break down how Shopify and Stripe owned Black Friday/Cyber Monday 2025—not through traditional ads, but by spotlighting merchants, building miniature cities by hand, and proving B2B doesn't have to be boring. They unpack record-breaking consumer spending ($1 trillion+ for the first time), the dark side of buy-now-pay-later debt, mobile shopping's takeover of desktop, and why craft beats AI when you're trying to stand out. The episode dives deep into Shopify's multi-channel BFCM strategy: Harvey Finkelstein's Twitter thread crowdsourcing merchant recs, a TBPN-sponsored broadcast featuring brand founders live, and projecting their real-time sales dashboard onto the Las Vegas Sphere. Then they dissect Stripe's hand-built miniature city live stream—15 buildings, motorized trains, 100+ customer Easter eggs, zero AI—and why unscalable activations create more buzz than Super Bowl ads. They also tackle Target's flat Stranger Things partnership (retro Doritos vs. Aldo's exclusive heels), the shift from desktop to mobile shopping enabling impulse buys, why 67% of BNPL users don't plan to pay on time, U.S. credit scores dropping for the first time in a decade, and what all of this means for marketers trying to win attention in 2024. key topics: Shopify's Black Friday strategy: Harvey Finkelstein Twitter thread, TBPN broadcast with founders, Las Vegas Sphere activation Stripe's hand-built miniature city live stream (craft vs. AI, customer Easter eggs, model makers) Black Friday 2024 breaks records: $14.2B spending (up 6%), first-ever $1 trillion holiday season Buy-now-pay-later explosion: $1B+ in BNPL volume, 67% don't plan to pay within terms, worst kind of debt U.S. credit scores dropping: largest decline since Great Recession, high interest rates + inflation + student loans Mobile overtakes desktop for shopping: impulse buys, Instagram ads, always-on commerce Target's Stranger Things partnership falls flat: retro Doritos, generic merch, missed experiential opportunity Aldo's Stranger Things heels as a better brand collab example (exclusivity, task-oriented shopping) Why unscalable = memorable: Stripe, Ramp, Anthropic pop-ups vs. traditional B2B ads Craft as brand positioning: Stripe Press, Apple's glass logo, Barbour's Wallace & Gromit vs. Coca-Cola AI Making customers your marketers: organic reach, spotlight merchants, extend activation shelf life guest: Kushaan Shah - Lifestyle Marketing at Superhuman (formerly Grammarly), writer on Substack (@kushaanshah on Twitter/X) guest perspective: Kushaan brings a B2B SaaS lens—talks about TBPN as the new TechCrunch, brand halo effects, task-oriented behavior vs. high-traffic browsing, and why happy customers extend marketing ROI. He's bullish on experiential unscalable activations and skeptical of partnerships that don't create unique value (Target/Stranger Things). Also shares insights on Superhuman's rebrand from Grammarly and building an end-to-end productivity suite. marketing takeaways: Spotlight your customers—they'll extend your reach organically (Shopify merchants, Stripe's customer Easter eggs) Unscalable beats scalable when everything looks like AI slop (hand-built city vs digital renders) Craft = brand positioning in the AI era (Stripe Press, Apple glass, live-streamed model making) Brand partnerships need unique value, not just co-branding (Aldo exclusive heels vs Target retro Doritos) B2B can be experiential and cultural (Ramp's Kevin stunt, Stripe City, TBBPN as status symbol) Mobile-first = impulse-first; design for task vs. browse behavior YOLO/FOMO marketing: create experiences people can't miss, not just products they can buy later Chapters 00:00:00 Welcome and Introducing Kushan Shah from Superhuman 00:02:19 Shopify's Black Friday Takeover on TBPN 00:07:03 Shopify's Las Vegas Sphere Activation 00:11:22 Black Friday Shopping Records and Economic Trends 00:12:27 The Rise of Buy Now Pay Later and Consumer Debt 00:17:00 Mobile Shopping Revolution 00:21:45 Amazon vs Shopify: The Battle for E-commerce 00:25:39 Stripe's Miniature City Campaign 00:34:55 The Value of Craft in Marketing 00:39:29 B2B Marketing Doesn't Have to Be Boring 00:41:06 Stranger Things x Target Partnership Analysis 00:48:08 What Makes Effective Brand Partnerships 00:59:05 Key Takeaways for Marketers 00:00-02:51 — Intro + Kushan on Superhuman rebrand (Grammarly → productivity suite) 02:51-14:25 — Shopify's BFCM blitz: TBBPN broadcast, Harvey's Twitter thread, Las Vegas Sphere 14:25-23:38 — Black Friday spending records, buy-now-pay-later explosion, credit score collapse 23:38-42:01 — Stripe's hand-built miniature city: craft vs. AI, live stream, customer Easter eggs, B2B experiential marketing 42:01-end — Target's Stranger Things partnership critique, Aldo heels as better example, key takeaways + where to find Kushan

  23. 36

    Give Your Audience A Voice: Hulu, Hunger Games, Shopify, & Miu Miu

    episode description: sonia and kaleigh break down why traditional marketing is dying and what's replacing it. they cover timothée chalamet's $250 jacket sellout, apple tv's continued failure to market good shows, hulu's genius grocery store hack, lionsgate listening to fans for hunger games casting, shopify's president crowdsourcing black friday recs, and why a luxury brand just said "fuck ai" with their new website. main thesis: communities beat celebrities, craft beats slop, and giving your audience a voice beats shouting at them with ads. key topics: timothée's marty supreme marketing turning movie promo into cultural participation apple tv fumbling pluribus marketing despite vince gilligan attachment hulu's qr code apples for abbott elementary (physical media comeback) elle fanning hunger games casting as fan service done right shopify president's black friday thread strategy (crowdsourced recommendations) miu miu's handcrafted anti-ai website aesthetic lionsgate hiring tiktok creators for in-house fan cams the shift from brand awareness to community buy-in why netflix/hulu finally stopped dmca-ing fan content advent calendar quality wars (sephora losing, amazon winning with korean skincare) guest: kaleigh moore - freelance seo/aeo content writer for saas companies, retail contributor at forbes (@kaleighf on twitter/x, kaleighmoore.com) guest perspective: kaleigh brings software/saas marketing lens throughout—talks surprise-and-delight moments, secret handshake marketing, first-mover advantage, crowdsourcing content strategy. she's obsessed with pluribus, advocates hard for fandom-first approaches, and makes the case that production houses need to treat audiences like content partners not consumers. marketing takeaways: novel placement beats ad spend (apples in grocery stores beat billboards) listen to your audience but don't let the loudest voices pivot your whole product executives as community builders not just figureheads unscalable = memorable when everything else looks like ai slop fan involvement creates buy-in (casting, merchandise, experiences) physical/tactile marketing cuts through digital fatigue timothée chalamet's marty supreme marketing (merch pop-up, $250 jackets) - 0:00-3:33 apple tv's pluribus marketing struggles - 3:33-6:33 hulu's abbott elementary apple sticker campaign - 7:16-15:44 lionsgates's elle fanning hunger games casting (fan involvement) - 15:47-24:17 shopify president's black friday thread strategy - 34:36-42:01 miu miu's anti-ai website design - 43:12-53:05 marketing takeaways roundup - 53:51-1:03:13

  24. 35

    Memeable Marketing is Winning: Timothée's Zoom Call, Steph Curry & Under Armour, Disney AI & YouTube

    This episode covers five major marketing and media topics: ChatGPT's new group chat feature launching in Asian markets as a potential WhatsApp competitor; Timothée Chalamet's innovative meta-marketing campaign for A24's Marty Supreme that blurs satire and reality while creating memeable experiential moments; the breakdown of Steph Curry's 12-year Under Armour partnership and what it reveals about brands failing to read cultural shifts in athletic wear; Disney+'s controversial decision to allow AI-generated content using Disney IP and the brand safety concerns it raises; and YouTube's emergence as the premier platform for launching new media companies, with creators leaving legacy outlets for better monetization and distribution. Key themes throughout: the shift from performance-based to culture-based marketing, the importance of experiential and memeable marketing for audience engagement, timing as brand positioning, and how video-first platforms (especially YouTube) are reshaping media consumption and creation. [00:02-05:49] ChatGPT's Group Chat Feature - Discussion of ChatGPT's new group chat feature launched in Japan, New Zealand, South Korea, and Taiwan, allowing up to 20 users to chat together with AI assistance for planning trips, splitting checks, and keeping tabs on decisions. [08:01-23:35] Timothée Chalamet's Meta Marketing for Marty Supreme - Deep dive into Chalamet's 18-minute satirical Zoom call with A24's marketing team, the blurring of reality/satire, experiential marketing tactics (blimp, Wheaties box, Regal Cinemas event), and how he's creating memeable moments to build cultural relevance. [23:35-36:16] Steph Curry & Under Armour Split - Analysis of the 12-year partnership ending, Under Armour's failures in reading cultural shifts, product missteps, the CEO's Trump endorsement controversy, and what this means for athlete endorsement deals going forward. [36:16-47:51] Disney's AI-Generated Content Strategy - Discussion of Disney+ letting subscribers create AI content using Disney IP, concerns about brand safety for parents, comparisons to other brands' AI strategies (Coca-Cola vs. Barbour), and whether this aligns with Disney's legacy brand identity. [48:01-1:05:50] YouTube as the Next Media Incubator - Mark's reporting on YouTube becoming the premier platform for new media companies, creators leaving legacy outlets for YouTube, monetization advantages, dynamic ad insertion, and the platform eating podcasting/audio content.

  25. 34

    Craft vs AI Wars: Apple, Barbour, & Coca-Cola

    Sonia and Christina break down consumer brand marketing wins and fails across Apple's glass logo rebrand, Nike's LA murals, Sephora's tone-deaf holiday ad with Mariah Carey, the AI wars between Coca-Cola and Barbour's Wallace & Gromit collab, and the Starbucks bear cup chaos. They also dig into Apple TV's quality-over-quantity approach, consumerism culture, and how brands are staking claims on AI vs craft.Nike Dodgers Murals (00:18-01:53)Apple's Glass Logo Rebrand & Apple TV (01:54-11:03)Sephora's Mariah Carey Holiday Ad Backlash (17:18-27:39)Coca-Cola AI vs Barbour Wallace & Gromit (28:34-37:20)Starbucks Bear Cup Disaster & Consumerism (37:21-47:03)Takeaways & Optimism (47:03-54:20)

  26. 33

    Nike Dodgers World Series Ad Analysis | $20K Neo Robot Launch | Grammarly Superhuman Rebrand

    Episode SummaryIn this episode, Sonia and Moshe dissect four big marketing moments. They start with Cracker Barrel’s self-aware tweet that uses humor to defuse backlash over its remodel, then dive deep into Nike’s “I Love LA” Dodgers World Series spot that swaps Randy Newman for Kendrick Lamar—layering the LA–Toronto rivalry with the Kendrick–Drake beef to show true cultural fluency. They pull out why speed and social listening matter, and why Gen Z (73%) rewards brands that read the room.They pivot to Neo, a consumer humanoid home robot marketed as a gentle helper—covering pricing ($20k or $500/month), remote operation/privacy tradeoffs, and why humanizing tech beats hype. From there, they break down Grammarly’s bold decision to rebrand the parent company to Superhuman and launch Superhuman Go, shifting from “grammar checker” to an AI-powered productivity suite in a $102B market—plus naming risks and brand equity realities. Finally, they critique PepsiCo’s corporate rebrand—new pastel-coded categories and “food, drink, smiles” tagline—questioning the move away from iconic Pepsi colors and whether corporate identity should ever feel this… corporate. The episode closes with crisp takeaways on cultural timing, expectation-setting, naming strategy, and portfolio signaling.00:00 — Welcome + Guest intro00:41 — Cracker Barrel’s clapback: humor to defuse a remodel fiasco01:08 — Nike’s Dodgers ad: Kendrick vs. Drake and LA vs. Toronto, cultural layering06:38 — Culture-coded Nike: city focus, social listening, Gen Z’s 73% cultural awareness stat12:08 — Global stars, sponsorship nuance: Shohei (New Balance) omitted; city pride14:17 — Real-time rollout: speed beats perfection in cultural moments15:09 — Meet Neo: the home humanoid robot (tasks, tone, positioning)21:47 — Price, privacy, and trust: $20k/$500 mo., remote ops, 68% welcome robots if secure29:11 — Marketing physical AI vs. software AI: education and expectations31:00 — Grammarly → Superhuman: parent rebrand and Superhuman Go launch35:02 — The productivity landscape: $102B market, tool fragmentation, AI tool growth40:22 — Naming and equity risks: “Superhuman Go,” tech vs. mainstream recognition42:40 — PepsiCo’s corporate rebrand: portfolio signaling, colors, “food, drink, smiles”52:16 — Takeaways: Nike—cultural fluency and timing53:47 — Takeaways: Neo—humanize tech, be transparent55:03 — Takeaways: Grammarly/Superhuman—name strategy, suite vs. single feature58:13 — Takeaways: PepsiCo—design communicates legacy vs. future59:28 — Wrap + where to follow

  27. 32

    Why Surveys Lie, Dodger Steaks Go Viral, and Lewis Hamilton is Most Marketable

    Halloween meets K‑pop as Amanda and Sonia kick off with costumes, community, and a Demon Hunter sing‑along, then pivot to the Bugonia “bald screening” stunt—who actually shaved vs who got bald caps, and what that says about event design and expectation setting. The core segment tackles why surveys mislead (AP’s Halloween stats; SparkTogether’s “would attend again” vs reality) and how better survey design, open‑endeds, and customer interviews avoid bias.They jump to baseball: a Dodgers fan’s steak ritual turns into an Omaha Steaks sponsor moment—textbook social listening and low‑lift brand collab. Next up: SportsPro’s Most Marketable Athletes list—Lewis Hamilton tops Messi/Ronaldo, Simone Biles and Steph Curry surge, Caitlin Clark outranks LeBron—and why athlete brand “multitudes” (vegan, Ferrari, causes) drive long‑term partnerships. They close with a mini‑masterclass on TikTok’s chaotic‑smart algorithm and why hiring a native editor helped the pod go viral, plus pragmatic takeaways on labeling, fandoms, and investing early in creators.00:05–03:02: Halloween vibes, suburban community, costumes, and AMC K‑pop Demon Hunter sing‑along03:03–06:15: Bugonia “bald screening” stunt: shaved heads vs bald caps, Emma Stone comment, event design ethics06:16–20:45:Survey data ≠ reality: AP Halloween stats, healthy snacks discourse, SparkTogether attend-again gap20:46–23:38:How to not screw up surveys: design, bias, goals, open‑endeds, customer calls23:39–27:56:Dodgers steak superstition: Jacob Brownson, Omaha Steaks social listening + sponsor code, creator collabs27:57–33:49:“Most marketable athletes”: Lewis Hamilton #1, Simone Biles, Steph Curry, Neymar, Caitlin Clark, LeBron; Kelce rank, Ohtani/NB, Curry/UA origin story33:50–38:02:TikTok virality: why the For You algorithm hits different, hiring a TikTok‑native editor, outsource what you’re not great at38:03–43:14: Key takeaways + wrap: intentions don’t forecast action, remove labels to grow fandoms, invest early in long‑term creator/athlete stories

  28. 31

    Ramp’s The Office Stunt, Twitter’s Link Feature, & Twilight Fancams

    From The Office's Kevin trapped in a glass box for Ramp to Lionsgate finally embracing fan editors, this episode unpacks the biggest marketing moves of the week. We break down how a B2B fintech company created the most talked-about experiential campaign, dive into Twitter's game-changing link update, and expose a wild Reddit marketing takedown that cost one company 80% of their revenue.Plus: AMC x Netflix's theatrical partnership, Heineken trolling Friend AI, and why one movie is asking fans to shave their heads. Bonus segment: how a viral YouTube video helped launch an innovative ultrasonic knife.Topics covered:Ramp's viral Office-themed marketing stuntTwitter's new in-platform link browsingLionsgate embracing fan editorsReddit marketing investigationAMC & Netflix partnershipProduct marketing innovationFollow us: @memeteampod (YouTube) @memeteampodcast (Spotify & TikTok) memeteampodcast.com#marketing #socialmedia #contentcreation #marketingstrategy #viralmarketing(00:00-00:42) - intro & celebrating 30 episodes(00:42-02:16) - new balance & shohei ohtani marketing(02:16-03:31) - amc & netflix partnership, k-pop demon hunters(04:34-06:13) - bugonia movie head-shaving stunt & heineken's friend ai campaign(06:32-14:25) - deep dive into ramp's office-themed marketing stunt(14:25-15:53) - discussion on positive vs rage marketing(15:53-31:50) - twitter's new in-platform browsing(31:50-35:13) - reddit marketing investigation case study(35:13-end) - ultrasonic knife invention & product marketing

  29. 30

    Timothée's Ping Pong Promo, Taylor's Lost Touch & Politicians on Podcasts

    In today's episode, Sonia and guest Christina Garnett break down three major shifts in marketing: Timothée Chalamet's genius guerrilla campaign for indie ping pong movie Marty Supreme, Taylor Swift's variant overload that's testing even die-hard Swifties, and why politicians desperately need to learn how to make TikToks AND go on 3-hour long podcasts.Plus: Netflix drops "Original," Apple TV loses "Plus," and why these streaming giants don't need to flex anymore. Special guest Christina Garnett drops knowledge on weakening fandoms, the problem with stunt marketing, and why your favorite brands might be trying too hard.Key Topics:How Timothée Chalamet is revolutionizing movie marketingTaylor Swift's variant strategy vs fan fatigueWhy politicians need to master 30-sec vertical videosThe death of streaming service flexingWhen fandoms get tired of your BSTech's obsession with rage-bait marketingThe real reason behind all these rebrandsWhy manufactured authenticity winsGuest: Christina Garnett, author of "Transforming Customer Brand Relationships"00:00 Introduction02:51 The Evolution of Streaming Services05:47 Timothée Chalamet's Unique Marketing Approach23:31 The Risk of Attention-Seeking Marketing33:33 The Evolving Role of Politicians in the Digital Age47:37 The Changing Landscape of Fandoms and Brand Loyalty58:44 Christina Garnett's Book Launch and Marketing Insights01:06:18 Takeaways

  30. 29

    Anthropic’s IRL NYC Popup, Taylor’s Future Wedding, K-Pop is Golden

    In this episode of the Meme Team podcast, Amanda and Sonia discuss various marketing strategies and cultural phenomena, including Cracker Barrel's logo controversy, Williams F1's community engagement, Tame Impala's unique concert experience, Anthropic's pop-up in New York, Taylor Swift's influence on the wedding industry, and the marketing strategies behind K-Pop Demon Hunters. They also touch on Merriam-Webster's clever campaign related to AI language models, emphasizing the importance of adapting to cultural trends and engaging with audiences in meaningful ways. 00:00 Cracker Barrel's Logo Controversy 02:43 Williams F1 Campaign and Community Engagement 05:04 Tame Impala's Unique Concert Experience 07:16 Anthropic's Zero Slop Pop-Up in NYC 09:59 Taylor Swift's Impact on the Wedding Industry 21:22 Taylor Swift's Wedding Soundtrack 23:03 K-Pop Demon Hunters Rise 25:41 Halloween Costumes and Cultural Representation 26:39 Marketing Strategies for K-Pop Demon Hunters 31:49 Cultural Trends and Brand Opportunities 34:48 Key Takeaways and Final Thoughts

  31. 28

    AI to ROI: OpenAI’s Ads + Instant Checkout Playbook

    This week on Meme Team, Sonia and Amanda dive into four big culture-meets-marketing moments:Taylor Swift x KitchenAid? How brands are borrowing her orange aesthetic to drive hype — without her even collabing.OpenAI’s first brand campaign + "agentic commerce." What instant checkout inside ChatGPT means for small businesses, DTC, and the future of discovery.The unicorn that won F1. How a fan’s sticker turned into a viral, feel-good growth story.Bad Bunny at the Super Bowl. Why skipping a U.S. tour but taking the halftime stage is a masterclass in distribution strategy.From fan whimsy to AI-powered shopping carts, this episode is full of smart plays marketers need to watch.

  32. 27

    Re-Releases, Scarcity Plays, and a $11B Ring | Meme Team 026

    Halloween re-releases, 3-day theater drops, and brand ads masquerading as short films. This week we unpack how "eventfication" is reshaping entertainment and marketing, why most "make it go viral" mandates miss the point, and what Oura's $875M raise (at an $11B valuation) says about wearables — especially for women.We cover:"Sinners" returns for Halloween and why timing + communal cosplay can revive the box office (and awards chatter).Central Perk Times Square: great IP, mid vibes — how theme builds should feel like the show, not a Starbucks.Sabrina Carpenter x The Muppets: playful brand fit, not tired “women-compete” tropes.Taylor Swift’s Life of a Showgirl theater “soiree”: event-based scarcity, cross-platform numerology, and AMC as a release partner.Virality, properly defined (hat tip: Roy Lee/Cluely): it should multiply traction, not substitute product-market fit.Claude vs. Perplexity ads: two creative directions for the same category, and why brand POV matters more than budget.Oura’s mega round: growth vs. usefulness, the smart-ring moat, and the glaring gap in women’s health insights.Takeaway: Build experiences people want to gather for, make content that deserves amplification, and ship products that solve real problems — especially for the customers you claim to serve.

  33. 26

    The Pitt’s Tuxedo Scrubs, Nike’s New Motto, Lessons from the NBA Spurs

    This episode explores how major institutions are adapting their content strategies for new audiences. We start with Robert Redford's passing, discussing how his work with Sundance created a blueprint for using cultural capital to build new communities. This ties into modern marketing innovations like "The Long Walk's" treadmill screenings—where the medium literally becomes the message.Our guest Caitlin Rease (San Antonio Spurs' content creator) breaks down how sports teams are evolving their content game. She shares insights on their viral food art schedule release and the challenges of real-time social content creation—where you've got minutes, sometimes seconds, to capture and share moments.We dig into how traditionally male-dominated spaces like the NBA are finding creative ways to engage female audiences (partially inspired by the Taylor Swift effect in the NFL). Nike's shift from "Just Do It" to "Why Do It?" shows how even iconic brands are rethinking their approach for Gen Z's more purpose-driven mindset.The key theme throughout: Successful modern marketing requires both speed and cultural awareness—whether you're running social for the Spurs or rebranding Nike's 37-year-old slogan. It's about finding authentic ways to connect with new audiences while keeping your core base engaged.Segments:0:00-4:30: Sundance and Streaming: Redford's legacy meets modern movie marketing4:30-7:00: Hot girl walks and treadmill screenings: Gen Z fitness trends7:00-13:30: Emmys recap: timer drama & award show evolution13:30-22:06: Scrubs to tuxedos: Figs' Emmy night innovation with Noah Wyle22:06-30:00: Nike's gen z pivot: from 'just do it' to 'why do it?'30:00-55:16: Behind the viral food art: Spurs' schedule release innovation55:16: TakeawaysGuest: Caitlin Rease, Content Creator for the San Antonio SpursKey Insights:sports teams adapting content for female audiences post-taylor swift effectreal-time social media challenges in sports coveragecross-demographic collaborations in sports marketingimportance of storytelling in social media, especially with 3-second attention spansMarketing Takeaways:calculated risks can unlock new audiencesunexpected collaborations can refresh standard contentknow your base but don't be afraid to expandtiming and cultural relevance matter

  34. 25

    Reese Witherspoon’s AI Take, Builder.ai’s Flameout, and Instagram's iPad App

    Comms pro Cristin Culver joins Meme Team to dissect Austin, TX's universally-dragged logo rollout, Reese Witherspoon’s shallow AI talking points (and how to master the PR art of bridging), and the Builder.ai collapse (aka why your ship-to-yap ratio matters). We also hit Instagram’s long-awaited iPad app, Threads’ watermarking, HBO’s latest rename spree, and Apple’s just-announced iPhone Air — with a through-line on hype vs. product and why social media is now entertainment first.Chapters:00:00: The new logo for Austin, TX; OpenAI's hiring platform; HBO09:30: Reese Witherspoon's missed opportunity to discuss the future of AI and filmmaking18:03: No seriously, THIS is why women should be using AI...23:50: What went wrong at Builder.ai35:30: Humane's outcome38:39: Apple Vision Pro (and their content misses)41:35: Instagram finally gets its own iPad app and here are the specs.45:11: You can pin your own comments on your IG posts!46:42: Threads' clever logo watermark on iPhone app screenshots47:54: Apple's new iPhone Air announcement just dropped.Follow Cristin Culver: https://x.com/CristinCulverFollow Sonia: https://x.com/SoniaBaschezFollow Amanda: https://x.com/amandanatLearn more at memeteampodcast.com.

  35. 24

    Sabrina shuns Tommy, YouTube Hypes Creators, & Horror's Killer Marketing

    In this episode of Meme Team, we break down three major marketing moments: Sabrina Carpenter's masterclass in brand authenticity after her album cover controversy, YouTube's game-changing new "Hype" feature for small creators, and Lionsgate's wild treadmill theater experience for "The Long Walk." From handling haters to innovative marketing stunts, we explore how brands and creators are pushing boundaries in 2025.Key moments:00:00 Intro00:10 Lego's Tom Holland campaign04:20 Sabrina Carpenter vs Tommy from Arkansas17:52 YouTube's new Hype feature28:29 The Long Walk's treadmill theater experience

  36. 23

    Bonus: Cadillac's American F1 Dream Team

    Join Sonia Baschez and "F1 Guy" Vincenzo Landino as they dive into the exciting announcement of Cadillac's entry into the F1 world for the 2026 season. Discover the strategic marketing decisions behind choosing experienced drivers Valtteri Bottas and Sergio Perez, and explore the marketing implications for Cadillac and the broader F1 community. The conversation also touches on the American identity of the new team compared to existing teams like Haas, and the potential for Cadillac to leverage its brand recognition to attract fans and boost sales.Key Points:- Cadillac's official announcement and its impact on the F1 landscape.- The choice of drivers: Valtteri Bottas and Sergio Perez.- Marketing strategies and the role of social media in the announcement.- The significance of Cadillac's American branding in F1.- Insights into the future of F1 and Cadillac's long-term plans.00:00 Cadillac's F1 Announcement Overview02:35 Driver Selection and Team Strategy05:08 Marketing and Brand Building07:21 The Role of Sponsorships and Partnerships10:00 American Identity in F112:48 Future Prospects and Community EngagementGuest: Vincenzo LandinoFollow him on Twitter @VincenzoLandino and learn more at bizofspeed.com.Follow Sonia: @soniabaschezFollow Us:YouTube: @memeteampod Spotify: @memeteampodcast

  37. 22

    Weirdness, Wellness, Weapons, and the End of Monoculture | Meme Team 022

    Join hosts Sonia Baschez and Amanda Natividad as we explore the cultural phenomena of Dubai chocolate and Labubu dolls, the impact of GLP-1 drugs on societal expectations, and the unique marketing strategies behind the film Weapons. We also quickly cover Zohran Mamdani's #zcavenger hunt, the viral success of Netflix's K-pop Demon Hunters, Sydney Sweeney's latest controversies, and the failed Cracker Barrel rebrand. 00:00 Introduction to the Meme Team Podcast01:07 Zohran Mamdani's Innovative Politic Campaign03:39 K-Pop and Theatrical Releases07:14 The Resurgence of Movie Theaters13:43 Cracker Barrel's Rebranding Controversy17:33 The Impact of Branding Changes20:50 Gen Z Trends and Cultural Shifts32:15 The Role of GLP-1 Drugs in Weight Management37:22 Authenticity in Celebrity Endorsements40:11 The Contradiction of Perfection vs. Imperfection44:00 The Impact of GLP-1 Drugs on Food and Fitness45:41 Marketing Strategies in Film: The Case of 'Weapons'01:02:59 TakeawaysGuest: Martin O'Leary - Irish tech marketer who accidentally ended up in fintech in DubaiFollow Us:Martin: @MartinolearySonia: @SoniaBaschezAmanda: @AmandaNatPodcast Socials:YouTube: @MemeTeamPodSpotify: @MemeTeamPodcastCall to Action: Don't forget to leave a review and subscribe for more insights into the world of marketing and virality!

  38. 21

    Trendjacking Taylor, Tariffs & Coach Bags, and Creating Timeless Brands

    In this episode of the Meme Team Podcast, hosts Amanda and Sonia explore the intersection of marketing, culture, and branding. They discuss the recent rebranding of MSNBC, the legacy of Duolingo's social media strategy, and the backlash against AI personalities. The conversation also touches on creative marketing campaigns, the cultural impact of Taylor Swift, and the importance of authenticity in brand engagement. Additionally, they delve into the evolution of Coach, the impact of tariffs on fashion brands, and the role of CEOs as storytellers. The episode concludes with key takeaways that highlight the significance of understanding consumer insights and the balance between data and creativity in marketing.Chapters00:00 Updates: MSNBC and Duolingo05:40 The Backlash Against GPT-5 and AI Personalities11:12 Taylor Swift's Cultural Impact and Monoculture Marketing16:38 The Role of Brands in Participating in Pop Culture22:08 Tariffs and Their Impact on Coach Handbags29:10 The Timeless Appeal of Coach Handbags36:49 Sustainability and the Launch of CoachTopia47:12 The CEO as Chief Storyteller56:15 Key Takeaways and Insights🎧 Subscribe for more takes at the intersection of marketing, culture, and the internet.Follow Us:Sonia: @SoniaBaschez | bendgrowth.co/yaasAmanda: @AmandaNat | amandanat.comPodcast Socials:YouTube: @MemeTeamPodSpotify: @MemeTeamPodcastDon't forget to leave a review and subscribe for more insights into the world of marketing and virality!

  39. 20

    Bonus: Dropping Her Album on a Podcast Was Genius

    In this bonus episode, Amanda and Sonia discuss Taylor Swift's recent appearance on the New Heights podcast, highlighting her marketing genius, personal insights, and the impact of her presence on the podcast landscape. They explore how Swift's approach to announcing new music and engaging with fans sets a new standard for artists, emphasizing the importance of authenticity and connection in the digital age.Chapters00:00 Taylor Swift's Impact on New Heights Podcast02:09 The Power of Podcasting for Artists04:49 Taylor Swift's Personal Insights and Fan Engagement06:35 The Business of Music and Artist Ownership09:02 Easter Eggs and Fan Relationships09:45 Navigating Fame and Personal Life12:21 The Art of Marketing and Album Rollout16:30 Takeaways🎧 Subscribe for more takes at the intersection of marketing, culture, and the internet.Follow Us:Sonia: @SoniaBaschez | bendgrowth.co/yaasAmanda: @AmandaNat | amandanat.comPodcast Socials:YouTube: @MemeTeamPodSpotify: @MemeTeamPodcastDon't forget to leave a review and subscribe for more insights into the world of marketing and virality!

  40. 19

    Over-Hype, Under-Deliver: Lessons from ChatGPT, Cluely, and More | Meme Team Ep. 020

    Taylor Swift Easter eggs, the GPT-5 backlash, and why your website traffic is tanking — we’re breaking it all down. In this episode, Amanda Natividad and Sonia Baschez unpack how over-hyping products can backfire, why even the biggest sites are losing Google traffic, the surprising comeback of DVDs and VHS, and what Instagram’s newest features mean for creators.Topics covered:Swifties crack the code on Travis Kelce’s New Heights guestGPT-5’s big launch (and bigger disappointment)The decline of organic search and rise of “experiences”Nostalgia marketing and the return of physical mediaInstagram’s new repost, maps, and friends features🎧 Subscribe for more takes at the intersection of marketing, culture, and the internet.Follow Us:Sonia: @SoniaBaschez | bendgrowth.co/yaasAmanda: @AmandaNat | amandanat.comPodcast Socials:YouTube: @MemeTeamPodSpotify: @MemeTeamPodcastDon't forget to leave a review and subscribe for more insights into the world of marketing and virality!

  41. 18

    Marketing in a World of Bots, Burnout, and Brand Missteps | Meme Team #019

    Join Amanda, Sonia, and special guest Chi Thukral as they dive into the world of social media marketing and the logic behind viral content. The episode covers the cultural impact of K-pop, the challenges of bot-driven internet traffic, and the nuances of selling exclusivity in today's market.Key Topics:Introduction and Guest Introduction - Start to 5:00K-pop Demon Hunters and Cultural Impact - 5:01 to 20:00Bot-Driven Internet Traffic - 20:01 to 40:00Selling Exclusivity and Brand Allure - 40:01 to 55:00Takeaways and Closing Remarks - 55:01 to EndGuest: Chi Thukral - Social Media StrategistFollow Us:Chi: @ChiThukralSonia: @SoniaBaschezAmanda: @AmandaNatPodcast Socials:YouTube: @MemeTeamPodSpotify: @MemeTeamPodcastCall to Action: Don't forget to leave a review and subscribe for more insights into the world of marketing and virality!

  42. 17

    Sydney Sweeney's Jeans or Genes? + Get Cited in AI Tools

    In this episode of the Meme Team podcast, Amanda and Sonia discuss the recent viral marketing strategies used by companies like Astronomer and American Eagle. They dive into the effectiveness of humor in addressing scandals, the implications of cultural sensitivity in marketing, and the evolving landscape of media influenced by AI. Amanda and Sonia discuss various aspects of modern marketing, including how to track success in PR, the shift from sponsored content to organic outreach, and the significance of human skills in an AI-driven world. They also explore nostalgia marketing, the future of movie marketing, and the recent split of Warner Brothers and Discovery. Chapters:00:00 Intro + Astronomer's Temporary Spokesperson05:05 Controversy in Advertising: Sydney Sweeney and American Eagle15:00 Navigating Cultural Sensitivity in Marketing23:00 The Impact of AI on Media and Marketing Strategies31:31 Tracking Success in PR and Marketing39:35 AI Skills and the Changing Landscape of Marketing Roles46:02 Nostalgia Marketing: Reviving the Past for Modern Audiences52:19 The Future of Movie Marketing and Re-Releases01:00:21 Key Takeaways and Final ThoughtsFollow us on LinkedIn, Twitter/X, and Instagram:Sonia Baschez - @soniabaschezAmanda Natividad - @amandanatMore about Sonia's consulting firm: bendgrowth.coMore about Amanda and her newsletter: amandanat.comMore about Meme Team: memeteampodcast.com

  43. 16

    Kiss Cam Crisis Comms, Colbert Cancelled, Delta's AI, & Dumb Logo Updates

    Description: In this episode, Amanda and Sonia dive into the intricacies of marketing, branding, and the impact of scandals on corporate reputation. They discuss the recent astronomer scandal, the cancellation of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, and the implications of AI-driven pricing strategies by Delta. The duo also explores the rebranding efforts of Goodreads and Range Rover, offering insights into the importance of maintaining brand legacy while embracing change.Key Topics:The astronomer scandal and its lessons for crisis management.The end of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert and what it means for late-night TV.Delta's AI pricing strategy and its potential impact on consumer trust.Rebranding efforts by Goodreads and Range Rover: What works and what doesn't.Chapters:00:00 Introduction 02:01 The Astronomer Scandal15:31 The Late Show Cancellation30:01 Delta's AI Pricing Strategies45:01 Rebranding Efforts from Goodreads and Range Rover58:01 Key Takeaways01:05:01 Closing RemarksFollow us on LinkedIn, Twitter/X, and Instagram:Sonia Baschez - @soniabaschezAmanda Natividad - @amandanatMore about Sonia's consulting firm: bendgrowth.coMore about Amanda and her newsletter: amandanat.comMore about Meme Team: memeteampodcast.com

  44. 15

    Attention does NOT equal influence... even if it made you click

    In this episode of the Meme Team Podcast, hosts Sonia Baschez and Amanda engage with guest Vincenzo Landino to explore the intersection of marketing, culture, and technology. They discuss a controversial casting call for gentrifiers, YouTube's new monetization policies targeting AI-generated content, and the rise of AI influencers. The conversation shifts to privacy concerns in social media and the evolving landscape of Formula 1, particularly Apple's interest in acquiring broadcasting rights. The episode concludes with insights on the future of live sports streaming and the role of AI in marketing. In this conversation, the speakers discuss the evolution of sports consumption, particularly how technology and social media have changed the way fans engage with sports. They explore Apple's strategic moves in sports broadcasting, including their investments in MLS and F1, and how these decisions reflect broader marketing strategies. The discussion also touches on the changing landscape of celebrity promotion and the importance of authenticity in media. Ultimately, they highlight the distinction between attention and influence in modern media, emphasizing the need for brands to navigate this complex landscape effectively.Chapters00:00 Introduction to the Meme Team Podcast01:02 Banter of the Week: Andrew Cuomo's Casting Call05:24 AI Slop: YouTube's New Monetization Policies11:23 The Rise of AI Influencers18:47 The Future of Digital Identity and AI in Marketing20:36 AI as a Tool for Marketers23:41 The Evolution of Formula 135:41 Apple's Strategic Moves in Sports Broadcasting43:53 Building for Culture Over Numbers45:59 Apple's Strategic Growth in Sports Media47:35 Liberty Media's Marketing Success48:34 The Evolution of Movie Promotional Content54:06 The Role of Influencers in Modern Media01:00:57 Attention vs. Influence in Marketing01:06:27 Authenticity in Celebrity Marketing01:12:22 New ChapterFollow us on LinkedIn, Twitter/X, and Instagram:Sonia Baschez - @soniabaschezAmanda Natividad - @amandanatMore about Sonia's consulting firm: bendgrowth.coMore about Amanda and her newsletter: amandanat.comMore about Meme Team: memeteampodcast.comVincenzo Landino - @vincenzolandino⁩More about Vincenzo and his newsletter: bizofspeed.com

  45. 14

    Why Being Real Wins: Mamdani, Oasis & Penguin Books

    From political campaigns to fast food fashion, we're breaking down the most interesting marketing moves of 2025. Watch as we analyze how brands are winning (and failing) at authentic engagement, including:• How a politician's candid street interactions beat staged PR • Why Oasis turned Manchester's trams into viral marketing gold • McDonald's clever fusion of western wear and fast food • Nike's surprising move to Substack • How Penguin Books' tweet hit 1B views • The Buffalo Wild Wings vs. Gmail showdownPlus: real talk about why manufactured authenticity is dead, why meeting your audience where they are matters more than ever, and how brands are finding success by taking creative risks in 2025.Chapters00:00 Introduction to the Meme Team Podcast01:11 Exploring Viral Marketing Stories02:32 Authenticity in Political Campaigns06:54 Engaging Younger Audiences with Content09:28 Oasis Tour and Hometown Marketing13:32 McDonald's Creative Campaigns20:05 Nike's Move to Substack20:12 Nike's New Publication on Substack25:46 The Power of Viral Marketing and Memes31:41 Engaging with Humor: The Buffalo Wild Wings Example38:04 New ChapterFollow us on LinkedIn, Twitter/X, and Instagram:Sonia Baschez - @soniabaschezAmanda Natividad - @amandanatMore about Sonia's consulting firm: bendgrowth.coMore about Amanda and her newsletter: amandanat.comMore about Meme Team: memeteampodcast.com

  46. 13

    When Brands Listen to Fans: F1, Superman & Star Wars

    From F1's innovative approach to female fans to Superman's viral marketing success, we're breaking down how major brands are actually listening to their audiences in 2025. Join Sonia Baschez and guest Christina Garnett as they analyze the wins (and fails) in fan engagement across sports and entertainment.Key topics:• How F1 is revolutionizing female fan engagement• Superman's masterclass in social media marketing• Star Wars: when fan service goes right (and wrong)• The power of authentic fan collaborationChapters00:00 Introduction to Virality and Brand Partnerships01:40 Expanding to New Audiences in F113:31 Superman Marketing Strategies and Fan Engagement18:44 Meme Culture in Movie Marketing21:48 Dystopian Reflections and Cultural Relevance23:20 The Impact of Internet Culture on Film Marketing25:53 Innovative Strategies in Movie Promotion27:55 Fan Culture and Casting Decisions31:19 Navigating Fan Expectations and Criticism in Star Wars37:57 The Importance of Storytelling in Media43:36 Direct-to-Fan Culture and Brand Engagement56:17 Christina's New BookFollow us on LinkedIn, Twitter/X, and Instagram:Sonia Baschez - @soniabaschezAmanda Natividad - @amandanatMore about Sonia's consulting firm: bendgrowth.coMore about Amanda and her newsletter: amandanat.comMore about Meme Team: memeteampodcast.comChristina Garnett - @thatchristinagPre-order Christina's book: amazon.com/dp/1398621323

  47. 12

    Zohran Mamdani’s Social Genius, Apple’s F1 Fail, Forensic Fandom, and the Doormat That Drove $500K

    In this episode of the Meme Team Podcast, hosts Sonia Baschez and Amanda Natividad discuss innovative marketing strategies, focusing on the digital campaigning of Zohran Mamdani, the integration of product placements in films, and the rise of forensic fandom in audience engagement. They explore how brands can creatively connect with their audiences through unique outreach methods, emphasizing the importance of community engagement and cultural authenticity in marketing efforts.Chapters:00:00 Introduction to Meme Team00:29 Lego Collaborations: X-Files and F101:15 Innovations in Agriculture: Dyson’s Strawberry Production02:12 Zoran Mamdani’s Campaign Strategy12:48 Apple’s F1 Movie Promotion and Product Placement21:01 Digital Marketing Innovations23:42 The Rise of Forensic Fandom37:02 Delve's Doormat drove $500K in Pipeline44:13: Key Takeaways... Starting with Mamdani's Political Marketing50:24 IP and Fandom: Engaging Hardcore Fans52:09 Creative Marketing: Fun and Whimsy in B2B54:07 Amplifying Marketing Efforts: Taking InitiativeFollow us on LinkedIn, Twitter/X, and Instagram:Sonia Baschez - @soniabaschezAmanda Natividad - @amandanatMore about Sonia's consulting firm: bendgrowth.coMore about Amanda and her newsletter: amandanat.comMore about Meme Team: memeteampodcast.com

  48. 11

    Controversy Creates Cash: From Cluely to F1 to Canva | Meme Team 012

    In this episode of the Meme Team Podcast, Sonia and Amanda discuss Cluely's controversial approach to gaining attention, the importance of zero-click marketing in today's social media landscape, explore influencer marketing tactics in F1, and highlight Canva's innovative out-of-home advertising campaign. The conversation emphasizes the need for creativity and authenticity in marketing, as well as the significance of influencer partnerships.Chapters00:20 Tom Cruise Promotes the F1 Movie02:02 Red Lobster's New Menu03:05 Cluely's Wild Ride and Marketing Lessons14:03 Meta & The Rise of Zero-Click Content22:36 Influencer Marketing in Sports25:25 Empowering Creators: Ownership in Marketing27:35 Building Buzz: The Art of Speculation28:02 Canva's Innovative Out-of-Home Advertising36:17 Creativity in Campaigns39:15 Key Takeaways: Lessons from Marketing Campaigns47:19 Fun Update!Follow us on LinkedIn, Twitter/X, and Instagram:Sonia Baschez - @soniabaschezAmanda Natividad - @amandanatMore about Sonia's consulting firm: bendgrowth.coMore about Amanda and her newsletter: amandanat.comMore about Meme Team: memeteampodcast.com

  49. 10

    Amazon & Roku's Ad Network + Influencer Lawsuit + Apple's F1 Movie + Sprout Social | Meme Team 011

    In this episode of the Meme Team Podcast, Amanda and Sonia discuss:- the evolving landscape of TV advertising- the recent class action lawsuit against Alo Yoga for misleading influencer promotions- the strategic shifts in Apple's marketing approach, particularly in film- insights from Sprout Social's annual report on social media trendsChapters00:00 Introduction and Podcast Overview01:21 Deloitte's Unique Employee Benefits05:55 Taylor Swift's Community Engagement06:03 Amazon and Roku's CTV Partnership18:08 The Future of Targeted Advertising19:55 The Quest for the Perfect Romper23:05 The Power of AI in Fashion Discovery24:47 The Evolution of TV Advertising25:46 Alo Yoga's Legal Troubles29:50 The FTC and Influencer Marketing36:14 The Ethics of Influencer Advertising40:36 Influencer Marketing and Consumer Perception43:06 Apple's Marketing Strategy in Film57:08 Insights from Sprout Social's Annual ReportFollow us on LinkedIn, Twitter/X, and Instagram:Sonia Baschez - @soniabaschezAmanda Natividad - @amandanatMore about Sonia's consulting firm: bendgrowth.coMore about Amanda and her newsletter: amandanat.comMore about Meme Team: memeteampodcast.com

  50. 9

    Coco Gauff wins, Uber Eats creates their own TikTok, and Wedding Content Creators | Meme Team 010

    On Meme Team, we talk about how to own your own story, narrative, and platform.This episode is brought to you by ⁠Sequel.io⁠, the only platform that lets marketers host webinars directly on your website. You can see what your audience does on your site before, during, and after your webinar — giving you better data for retargeting and sales management. Learn more at ⁠Sequel.io⁠. - Athlete - brand relationships have changed and we're here for it- Uber Eats is competing to own all the verticals so they can compete with Waymo.- Deloitte wants you to know how hard their people work, but at least it's FOR you.- What are wedding content creators??Follow us:Sonia Baschez (@soniabaschez): ⁠⁠⁠LinkedIn⁠⁠⁠ and ⁠⁠⁠Twitter/X⁠⁠⁠Amanda Natividad (@amandanat): ⁠⁠⁠LinkedIn⁠⁠⁠, ⁠⁠⁠Twitter/X⁠⁠, and ⁠Instagram⁠Sonia's consulting firm: ⁠bendgrowth.co⁠Amanda and her newsletter: ⁠amandanat.com⁠Meme Team: ⁠memeteampodcast.com⁠Our sponsor: ⁠Sequel.io

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Meme Team dissects the marketing strategies creating breakout cultural moments. Host Sonia Baschez breaks down real campaigns, cultural moments, and marketing trends with other marketers. If you care about positioning, storytelling, or why the algorithm is acting weird again, this one's for you.

HOSTED BY

Sonia Baschez

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