Stunt Watch: John Lewis is a shop, Paddy Power protects against Arsenal, THIS serves up something great, and Carling Black Label is back
John Lewis signs footballer John-Lewis for its campaign during the World Cup summer
His name is a shop.
With a certain unmissable summer of sport fast approaching, a colossal season of international football on the horizon, and what some are already calling the biggest sporting spectacle of the year almost upon us (I know the rules), John Lewis needed to make some noise about televisions.
So they signed a footballer.
Here’s where I love it. They didn’t splash the cash on big superstars, no Premier League golden boys, but they went for a 5th-tier national football team, Boston United’s very own striker, Lenell John-Lewis, a man who has spent his career in the National League soundtracked by one of the greatest crowd chants in non-league history: "his name is a shop".
It’s a story that kind of does it for you, and they didn't overthink it. With ticket prices for this particular, very large, extremely unmissable international tournament reaching levels that have made their own headlines, the case for a serious home setup has never been stronger. Big screen. Good sound. Your sofa. Funnily enough, John Lewis sells all of those things.
The tone is spot on and the content is good fun. I’ve also been singing “His name is a shop. His name is a shop” ever since I saw it.
Campaign: John Lewis signs footballer John-Lewis
Client: John Lewis
Agency: Earnies
Paddy Power’s public health warning to all non-Arsenal supporters
A certain North London football club won a certain top-flight domestic title for the first time in a very long time. You may have heard about it. Mainly because its fans haven't stopped talking about it.
Paddy Power saw this coming and did what Paddy Power usually does: quick, reactive, on-the-money commentary through content.
They issued a public service health warning. The advice was to avoid Arsenal supporters at all costs (something that is really hard to do in the world of PR). Symptoms of exposure include being told an unsolicited statistic, being shown goal involvements on someone's phone, and being subjected to a retro kit that clearly has not fit correctly since 2009.
And if you saw the scenes outside the Emirates on Tuesday night, it is, of course, completely accurate.
(It is also worth noting, for the record, for those of us who watch football with our eyes, that the actual football community has reached a broad consensus that this particular title race was significantly assisted by some truly remarkable refereeing decisions. But that's probably a conversation for another day. PGMOL could not be reached for comment.)
It’s not a stunt that set the world on fire, but it’s Paddy Power, working exactly as Paddy Power does and that consistency is key in today's world.
BREAKING: With Arsenal confirmed as Premier League champions, a public health warning has been issued...
— Paddy Power (@paddypower) May 19, 2026
18+ GambleAware pic.twitter.com/aJavkn8SAI
Plant food producer THIS make a delicious MisSTEAK
THIS, the plant-based food company, launched a new product and made a load of noise about it: a 100% plant-based STEAK. And to do so, they tapped into 'steak culture' perfectly to get the attention that such an insane launch needed.
To launch its 100% plant-based fillet steak, they leaned so hard into steak culture that it looped back around to brilliant. Rather than tiptoeing around the meat-eater audience, they went straight for them. Country music, cowboys, the deep south. The whole thing.
The hero piece is a parody country music video called A Delicious Misteak by Flint Flatiron (brilliant), a song about a lone cowboy by the fire, a suspiciously good-looking fillet, a moment of doubt, and then full heartbreak. It ticked all the tropes of a country music video which is what made it great, and I really hope this is the resurgence of parody songs, because we take ourselves a bit too seriously at the moment, don’t we?
Then they created a pop-up tattoo shop takeover at Flamin' Eight, a vegan tattoo studio in Kentish Town, where visitors got free cowboy-themed tattoos and left with a plant-based steak sandwich.
Trashy tattoos and parody videos make me feel like the early 00’s are coming back, and in PR land, that’s a big win (the glory days some called it), but this is just a fun campaign, in a serious world. Lovely stuff.
Campaign: A Delicious Missteak
Client: THIS
Agency: Insiders, Jonny Stanton
Carling Black Label is back
If you know, you know. And if you don't know, ask your dad.
Carling Black Label is the lager of fellas that remember when a pint had change from a quid. Think of the internet of circa 2007 - men from this era will also tell you unprompted that they don't make adverts like they used to! And on that last point, for once, they are absolutely right.
Because the adverts they made were genuinely brilliant. The "I bet he drinks Carling Black Label" campaign produced some of the most iconic spots that made kids say “I want to be in advertising”.
The most iconic of the lot was a small daredevil rodent navigating an obstacle course for a nut feeder.
So to relaunch the brand, Carling brought the squirrel back, but a new squirrel (of course) trained by Trevor Smith, the very same handler who worked on the original.
The voiceover is once again provided by Stephen Frost, who was reportedly delighted to return. Over 100 hours to build the course. Three weeks of squirrel training, which I would have loved to have seen. Completely glorious.
This is nostalgia done properly, an actual remake, the same energy as before, because the audience already exists and all you have to do is not screw it up, and Skige the squirrel did not screw it up.
Campaign: Squirrel
Client: Carling Black Label
Agency: Ready10
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