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Nomadic Creativity

Jeremy Clarkson’s lager ad just got banned. Just as planned.

He may not everyone’s cup of tea or pint, in this case, but you’ve got to tip your glass to Jeremy Clarkson.

The face of Diddly Squat farm just released a gloriously unfiltered spot for his Hawkstone Lager brand: recruiting 34 farmers to chant a profanity-laced opera, complete with AI-sync’d vocals shouting “F*** me, it’s good.” Unsurprisingly, regulators banned it from broadcast. But online? Over 1M views, half a million in the first day, and massive coverage across mainstream and social media.

This wasn’t just Clarkson being Clarkson, it was a savvy move that plays perfectly into Hawkstone’s outsider identity. Rejection wasn’t a risk; it was part of the strategy. The ban became the buzz. And in a category full of bland, forgettable beer ads, Hawkstone stood out by doing exactly what people expect from Clarkson: push it too far and get talked about.

Outtakes:

  1. If you’re going to be banned, own it – Controversy can work when it aligns with your brand’s personality.
  2. Clarkson is the brand – His voice, worldview and audience give Hawkstone a ready-made cultural identity.
  3. Sometimes, the reaction is the reach – A ban doesn’t block your message. It can become the campaign.

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Nomadic Creativity

Nomadic Creativity

About Excursion Studio

We are a brand consultancy, design studio and ideas shop for a noisy planet.

The marketing world is increasingly crowded, noisy, fake, and complex. So we help brands thrive by taking them into expansive new spaces.

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