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When it pays to engage in a brand rivalry.
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Today is Thursday. And ads are coming to Apple Maps this summer. If your directions suddenly reroute you to the nearest fast-food pit stop to try the newest burger offering, now you know why.

In today’s edition:

—Katie Hicks, Alyssa Meyers

BRAND STRATEGY

Photo collage of a video game versus screen with a Coca-Cola bottle on one side and Pepsi on the other.

Morning Brew Design, Photos: Adobe Stock

Heated rivalries are everywhere, and not just between fictional hockey players.

There is no shortage of noted brand duels in American culture. Some, like Apple and Microsoft, Nike and Adidas, or Coke and Pepsi, have been going on for decades, while others, like Uber and Lyft or Poppi and Olipop, are newer to the game.

Recently, fast-food brands were quick to engage in a game of us-versus-them when McDonald’s CEO Chris Kempczinski posted a video to LinkedIn of himself taking a not-so-big and now much-memed bite of the brand’s new Big Arch burger. Competitors Burger King and Wendy’s were quick to respond with their own executive taste-test videos, creating a viral burger-wars moment that ultimately led to a boost in visibility for McDonald’s and its rivals.

“It’s all a win,” Mike Ford, CEO of audience management platform Skydeo, told us. “No one was talking about McDonald’s or the Big Arch before this.”

After the viral moment, McDonald’s reported a sales boost for the Big Arch, and for Burger King, the buzz around its brand and president led into the release of a new brutally honest campaign as part of a bigger effort to establish a new tone of voice, CMO Joel Yashinsky told us.

“I think that plays a factor in terms of whether you get engaged with and battle it out with your competitors in a social and public fashion,” Yashinsky said. “We want to be seen as a brand that’s fun.”

While a little competition can be mutually beneficial, it can also come with risks. We spoke with experts about when and how to engage in brand rivalries without tarnishing reputations—or giving too much attention to the other side.

Continue reading here.—KH

Presented By Disney Campaign Manager

SPORTS MARKETING

Screenshots from @Jomboy_ on Instagram and @adam.botkin on TikTok

Credit: Morning Brew Design, Screenshots: @Jomboy_/Instagram, @adam.botkin/TikTok

Spring has sprung, and so has the 2026 Major League Baseball season.

For fans, watching this year’s opening game was a little different than usual. MLB has been shifting away from regional sports networks and toward modern media rights deals, a change that was on full display last night when Netflix exclusively aired the “Opening Night” matchup between the New York Yankees and the San Francisco Giants as part of a new three-year deal between the league and the streamer.

While the typical slate of Opening Day games airs today as usual, the nontraditional season kickoff on Netflix is indicative of a broader strategic shift that’s underway at MLB. The league is placing increasing emphasis on new-media platforms as it, like many sports organizations, seeks to hook and retain the next generation of fans.

That focus has extended beyond streaming services and into the tech and content space, where the MLB inked and re-upped a number of deals focused on social and creators to support getting games and athletes in front of new eyeballs.

“The World Series was the perfect embodiment of the whole season last year, where we just saw growth in our viewership on national media broadcasts, ticket sales, all that,” Alex Cadicamo, the league’s VP of media business development and strategy, told Marketing Brew. “The ability, particularly on social, to create these viral moments that reached beyond our typical audience, that’s something that, coming out of the season, we had a lot of conversations about.”

Read more here.—AM

Together With Fluency

NEWFRONTS

LinkedIn with AI elements

Francis Scialabba

At their second-ever NewFront on Monday evening, the execs at LinkedIn attempted to do the (nearly) impossible: make B2B marketing cool.

“LinkedIn is showing up with some swagger in the market,” Matthew Derella, VP of LinkedIn Marketing Solutions, told Marketing Brew the day after the presentation, which was closed to the press.

As part of the effort, his team is emphasizing LinkedIn’s creator partnership opportunities, live-event tie-ins, and cross-platform targeting capabilities, while also underscoring the measurable benefits of LinkedIn campaigns.

“Part of what we’re advocating for for marketers is to make sure that you’re not wasting your precious media investment on vanity metrics,” Derella said. “We believe that the real power of partnering with LinkedIn is that we can drive real outcomes for you, that matter to your CFO, that matter to your board, that help you grow your company.”

Read more here.—AM

Together With ZBiotics

FRENCH PRESS

French Press

Morning Brew

There are a lot of bad marketing tips out there. These aren’t those.

Stop the scroll: How some creators capture their audience’s attention.

Timing is everything: The best times to post on social media platforms.

Blame the AI overviews: Organic search traffic is down 42%. What’s the SEO industry to do?

A winning campaign playbook: Unlock insights and turn campaign success into repeatable wins for you and your clients with Disney Campaign Manager. Get started today.*

*A message from our sponsor.

JOBS

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WISH WE WROTE THIS

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Morning Brew

Stories we’re jealous of.

  • New York magazine wrote about the proliferation of AI-generated fruit videos on social media and the engagement-farming industry behind them.
  • Bloomberg dug into Red Lobster’s dire financial straits, in contrast to its public comeback story.
  • The New York Times wrote about how taste is becoming a highly valued asset in response to mass-produced and AI-generated content.

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