They Came for Soccer. They Stayed for Ranch Dressing. And America’s Brands Missed the Kick-Off.
The 2026 World Cup just handed corporate America a gift so perfect, so ready-made, so dripping with authentic consumer joy that any first-year marketing student would recognize it immediately.
Turns out most of the brands involved aren’t on the pitch. They’re stuck on the sidelines.
Here’s the setup: hundreds of thousands of soccer fans from around the world arrived in America, pointed their cameras at everything, and proceeded to completely lose their minds — not over the matches, but over us. Over ranch dressing and free refills and Buc-ee’s and Costco and serving sizes with ice that make grown adults go silent with awe. The videos are everywhere. They have millions of views. They are funny and warm and completely, disarmingly genuine.
And almost none of them have a brand anywhere near them.
That’s not a missed opportunity. That’s a missed penalty kick. From five yards out. With an open net.
Buc-ee’s: The Internet Found You First
German fan Freddy stood in a Buc-ee’s parking lot and posted: “DUDE LMAO THIS IS A GAS STATION.” He went from 11,000 followers to 687,000 in two weeks. Governors welcomed him to their states. Hilton slid into his DMs with a free room. Auburn Football claimed him as a native son.
Buc-ee’s? Quiet as a church mouse. Which is ironic, because their whole brand is a beaver.
Instead Buc-ee’s does not need a campaign. They need awareness and speed. Give Freddy a Buc-ee’s travel kit and let him document every stop in real time. Turn his journey into an official “First Stop in America” series. Post his content from the brand account instead of letting the internet run it without them.
Every video he makes is already an ad. The only question is whether Buc-ee’s wants credit for it.
Texas Roadhouse: The Most Natural Focus Group Ever Recorded
A Japanese fan takes one bite of Texas Roadhouse bread, and when told the chain operates in other countries, puts his head in his hands and asks: “Why isn’t Japan on the list?” That is not content. That is unsolicited market research delivered with emotional sincerity and zero prompting.
Texas Roadhouse’s response? Crickets. Which, given the opportunity, is less farm-to-table and more drop-the-ball.
Instead Texas Roadhouse does not need to “activate” anything. They need to collect what is already happening. Build a “first bite” series around real international reactions. Treat every video as unsolicited research. Let the audience accidentally write your global strategy in real time.
Right now, they are sitting on consumer demand that is literally talking back to them. The only question is whether anyone is listening.
Argentina vs. the “Regular” Soda
An Argentine fan orders a “regular” soda and is handed a cup the size of a small child. His slow turn to camera — completely speechless — has more emotional range than most Super Bowl ads. The video racks up millions of views with no brand attached, which somehow makes it even louder. Or there was the Italian fan who encountered unlimited refills, stared at his cup in disbelief, and announced that he could refill it 1,000 times.
What they should do is recognize that moments like this are already happening without permission. This is not a content gap. This is a distribution gap. The reaction exists. The scale exists. What’s missing is ownership of the moment before it leaves the ecosystem entirely.
The world is documenting itself reacting to America. The only question is who is organizing the footage.
Hidden Valley Ranch: The Sudden Global Debut
And then there’s ranch dressing. A Swedish woman discovered it in Indianapolis and something in her shifted — visibly and permanently. She is not alone. Across eleven host cities, Europeans and Asians and South Americans are encountering Hidden Valley Ranch for the first time and reacting the way people react when they find out they’ve been missing something their whole lives. The word they keep using is “obsessed.”
Hidden Valley’s response to their surprise global debut? Tumbleweeds.
Instead? Hidden Valley does not need to reintroduce ranch. They need to acknowledge it has already been introduced. Build “The Secret’s Out” around real reactions instead of manufactured awareness. Let fan footage carry the campaign. Turn sampling into storytelling. Let the product enter the world the way it already is entering it — through shock, curiosity, and repeat consumption.
Right now, ranch is not being marketed. It is being discovered.
One warning for international travelers, though: if you discover ranch dressing and immediately decide to bring a bottle home, TSA may have other plans. Try putting it in your carry-on and your relationship could end at the security checkpoint.
The Tartan Army vs. Sam Adams
Then there’s the Tartan Army — Scotland’s kilt-wearing, bagpipe-playing, legendarily joyful fans, making their first World Cup appearance in 28 years. They hit Boston like a beautiful, tartan-clad storm and drank the Sam Adams Taproom completely out of Boston Lager. Another bar ran out entirely — down to nothing but Bud Light, which is a different kind of national emergency. A liquor store’s refrigerator door broke from being opened so many times.
Sam Adams put out a press release.
A PRESS RELEASE…
That’s the marketing equivalent of scoring on your own goal and then filing a report about it. The Tartan Army handed Sam Adams the most gloriously earned brand moment in craft beer history — 90 empty kegs, a city that ran dry, bars breaking under the weight of demand — and the response was a document.
The limited-edition “They Drank Us Dry” can. The “emergency delivery” social content filmed in real time, from inside the bar, while it was happening. The billboard in Boston that just says “90 KEGS” with a winking Sam Adams portrait. All of it sitting right there on the pitch. Nobody went for the ball.
The Playbook Nobody’s Running
This is not about chasing virality. It’s about recognizing that the most credible endorsement a brand can get is a human being from another country, with no financial stake, experiencing genuine joy. You cannot buy that. You can only find it, show up next to it, and not ruin it by being weird about it.
Buc-ee’s
Buc-ee’s has a viral ambassador traveling America on camera with 687,000 people watching his every stop. The move isn’t a sponsorship contract with thirty approval layers. It’s a DM and a care package. Make Freddy the face of the “First Timer” campaign — a series built around real international visitors walking through those doors for the first time, in their own languages, with their own unfiltered reactions. You don’t need a script. You need a camera crew and a beaver mascot with enough self-awareness to get out of the way. Every video Freddy posts right now is a Buc-ee’s ad. The only question is whether Buc-ee’s name is on it.
Sam Adams
They still have a chance — barely. The Tartan Army is in Miami right now, still thirsty, marching through Little Havana ahead of Wednesday’s match against Brazil. The “They Drank Us Dry” limited edition can is a four-day turnaround for a brand with resources. The co-branded push with local Miami bars — “The Tartan Army Is Coming. We’re Ready This Time” — is a real-time campaign that writes itself. Follow them city to city. Be the beer that became their beer. That’s not advertising. That’s a love story.
Hidden Valley Ranch
Hidden Valley is sitting on the condiment coup of the century. The move domestically is to take all this glorious, unsolicited fan footage and build a campaign around American pride in the one sauce the rest of the world didn’t know it needed: “The Secret’s Out.” Billboards in host cities. Pop-up ranch bars at fan zones — yes, an actual ranch dressing bar, flights of ranch, ranch pairings, ranch sommeliers if we’re going there — that turn a condiment into an experience. The international expansion case practically makes itself, but the domestic win is making Americans fall back in love with something they’ve always taken for granted. Because nothing makes you appreciate what you have like watching someone else discover it for the first time. We had Grok make us a sample post in about 10 minutes. Imagine what could be in a half hour.
In fact, Hidden Valley could even run this ad that we conveniently made for them.
Walmart
Walmart has become, without trying, the most-filmed retail experience in World Cup history. International fans have been wandering its aisles like anthropologists — the cereal wall, the 47 varieties of salad dressing, the family-sized everything — and posting it all with the wonder of people who just found out a better world was possible. The domestic campaign hiding in all of this is a reintroduction to Americans who’ve taken it for granted: a “Seen Through Fresh Eyes” series using real fan footage, real reactions, real products. Not a corporate reshoot. The actual videos. Because when a Moroccan man stares at your cereal aisle like it’s the Sistine Chapel, that’s not just funny. That’s a brand story.
Costco
Costco doesn’t need to mention the tournament at all. That’s what makes this so good. The $1.50 hot dog hasn’t moved since 1985 — through recessions, inflation, and every economic catastrophe the last four decades could throw at it. The whole world just showed up and noticed. “The most stable currency in America has mustard on it.” That’s the campaign. One line. One billboard. A brand truth that’s been sitting in a food court since Reagan, waiting for someone to say it out loud.
The thing about a beautiful game is that everyone can see when someone’s open and nobody passes to them.
Right now, the open player is joy. Genuine, viral, multinational, zero-cost consumer joy, broadcasting itself across every platform, in eight languages, to audiences brands spend millions trying to reach.
Pass the ball.
The final whistle hasn’t blown yet.
On The Marc Media finds the story before it’s gone. Usually while everyone else is still reading the press release.





















