đ„ The World Cup is already on screen: adverts that broke the internet đș
đ„ The World Cup is already on screen: adverts that broke the internet đș Forget the wait and the restrained hype: brands have already scored the first screamers of the 2026 World Cup. Between â90s nostalgia, impossible pop-culture cameos, and animations flirting with madness, these are the commercials youâll have on loop all month. If you havenât seen them, youâre offside. The streets rule: Adidasâ tribute to street football Adidas has decided to bring the stars down from Olympus and throw them straight into the concrete cage. In a brutal tribute to street football, we see Jude Bellingham and Lamine Yamal pulling off impossible nutmegs on an urban pitch, while an eternal Lionel Messi blesses the scene from the sidelines. The cherry on top? A wild Bad Bunny cameo that takes the ad into full-on pop culture event territory. Pure streetwear, rhythm, and playground football. 'Rip the script': Nike tears up the playbook with Hollywood and the sportâs 'Olympus' Nike has said âenough with predictable storiesâ and blown up football clichĂ©s with its new slogan. In a blockbuster that looks straight out of a Marvel action movie, the brand brings together its usual suspects âKylian MbappĂ©, Vinicius Jr, Erling Haaland and Jamal Musialaâ as they tear through defenses at the speed of light. But the real madness comes with the crossovers: seeing Kim Kardashian reacting to the tournament hype, and LeBron James alongside Cristiano Ronaldo blessing the spectacle, takes the ad to an absolutely massive pop level. A statement of intent: this World Cup isnât about following the rules, itâs about rewriting them. Pure nostalgia: Brahma travels back to 1998 with Ancelotti and Ronaldo If youâve got even a little football culture, Nikeâs 1998 airport ad is sacred. Brazilian beer brand Brahma knows it and has pulled off a historic troll/tribute. This time, the chaos is out on the countryâs streets, with Ronaldo NazĂĄrio watching it from afar. But with a brilliant twist: Carlo Ancelotti shows up trying to restore order with his trademark raised eyebrow. A clash of eras that unlocks memories you didnât even know you had. The American dream: FOX sets the madness of the USA to the rhythm of Elvis Can you imagine the United States lifting the World Cup? FOX can, and it has gone big with it. Set to an Elvis Presley banger, the ad is a patriotic, epic fever dream where Christian Pulisic shares the screen with legends like Tom Brady and none other than Zlatan Ibrahimovic (because wherever thereâs ego, thereâs Zlatan). The master stroke of sporting epicness comes from Mike Eruzione, the hero of the 1980 âMiracle on Ice,â reminding us that in sports, you have to believe in miracles. Argentine mystique: Quilmes and the reasons to believe again Quilmesâ World Cup ads arenât commercials, theyâre emotional short films. For this occasion, the Argentine brand has tugged at the heartstrings once again by bringing together a cast thatâs part cultural and sporting heritage: Manu GinĂłbili, Charly GarcĂa and Guillermo Coppola mix with world champions Leandro Paredes and Ăngel Di MarĂa. If this ad doesnât give you goosebumps, youâve got no blood in your veins. The âreasons to believeâ are more alive than ever. Brick by brick: LEGO assembles the ultimate 'Dream Team' If you thought the transfer market was madness, LEGO has done the impossible in stop-motion. Theyâve managed to bring together Kylian MbappĂ©, Vinicius Jr., Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo on the same (plastic) pitch. Watching the best players on the planet, pixelated and built piece by piece, celebrating goals is a damn visual stroke of genius that hooks both football fans and animation obsessives alike. Rhythm and 'heritage': PEPSI brings back footballâs iconic anthem with Beckham and Vini Jr. Pepsi returns to its comfort zone: music, color, and frenetic rhythm. Set to Galaâs party anthem âFreed from Desire,â the ad is a parade of pure charisma. David Beckham brings his usual class, while Vinicius Jr. and Mo Salah add todayâs magic, and Alexia Putellas shows why sheâs the queen of womenâs football. Itâs the kind of ad that makes you want to run outside and start dribbling past streetlights. This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in đȘđž here.
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