coca cola slurp

Coca-Cola: Slurp and Crunch Cinema Spots

Cinema etiquette, packaged as entertainment

Coca-Cola, with the help of Saatchi & Saatchi Denmark and M2Film, created a two-spot public service campaign that highlighted the annoyance of noisy slurps and crunching of refreshments during public viewing at the cinema.

Coca-Cola Gangster

Coca-Cola Stableboy

The move: make the sound the villain

Everyone knows the noise. The spots take that tiny irritation and push it to the foreground, so the whole room shares the same reaction at the same time.

Why it works where it plays

Because it runs in the cinema. The reminder lands in the exact environment where people can immediately correct themselves. It feels like a social cue, not a rule.

The behavioral job

Highlight how slurps and crunching can ruin public cinema viewing, and nudge people toward better behavior without preaching.

Steal the nudge

  • Pick a universal micro-irritation and dramatize it fast.
  • Deliver the message in-context, where relevance is unavoidable.
  • Use story and character so behavior change stays watchable.

A few fast answers before you act

What was this Coca-Cola cinema campaign?

A two-spot campaign designed to highlight how loud slurping and crunchy snacking can annoy other people during a movie.

Who created the campaign?

The post credits Saatchi & Saatchi Denmark and M2Film alongside Coca-Cola.

How many spots were there and what were they called?

Two spots. “Coca-Cola Gangster” and “Coca-Cola Stableboy.”

Where was this intended to run?

In a cinema context, aimed at audiences during public film viewing.