Renault Clio: A Test Drive Takes a Sexy Turn

Renault Clio: A Test Drive Takes a Sexy Turn

TNT’s “A dramatic surprise on an ice-cold day” meets Pepsi MAX’s “Jeff Gordon test drive prank” in this latest test drive video for the all new Renault Clio.

In the video a couple of guys are seen taking the Renault Clio for a spin. After a regular beginning, the salesman shows off the “va va voom” button, a prank trigger that flips the drive into a choreographed romantic scene.

This is a staged test-drive prank, not a feature demonstration. The “va va voom” button is the trigger that flips an everyday drive into a choreographed French fantasy.

And here is a version for the ladies.

The button as a narrative trigger

The mechanism is a single, irresistible cue. A salesman introduces a mysterious button. The driver presses it. The world outside the windows transforms into a set-piece built from instantly recognizable signals, so the passenger can “feel” the promise without a single spec sheet.

In automotive marketing, test drive formats often double as shareable entertainment that reaches far beyond the dealership.

The real question is whether the launch gives people a story worth retelling once the drive is over.

Why it lands

This works because it turns a low-drama ritual into an event with a clear before-and-after. The joke is simple enough to follow in seconds, and the escalation is visual enough to hold attention without context. Most importantly, it makes the test drive itself the content, not the car brochure. The stronger creative move is the trigger-led transformation, not the flirtation itself.

Extractable takeaway: If you can attach a single, obvious trigger to a dramatic “world change”, you turn a routine product interaction into a personal story. Personal stories are easier to retell, and harder to forget, than feature lists.

What to borrow without copying the exact gag

  • One trigger, one transformation: keep the entry point unmistakable and the payoff immediate.
  • Design for first-time viewers: someone should understand the premise even if they start watching mid-scene.
  • Let the participant stay authentic: the strongest moments are the unscripted reactions, not the actors.
  • Use stereotypes carefully: shorthand can make an idea legible fast, but it can also age poorly if the tone tips.
  • Make the edit do the persuasion: pace and escalation matter more than how many “surprises” you add.

A few fast answers before you act

What is the Renault Clio “va va voom” test drive video?

It is a staged test-drive prank where pressing a “va va voom” button triggers a choreographed romantic, Paris-themed scene around the car.

Why does this format work for car launches?

Because it makes the test drive itself feel like an event. That creates watchable reactions and gives people a reason to share the experience, not just talk about the vehicle.

What’s the key mechanic to reuse?

A single, easy-to-understand trigger that causes an immediate, visible change in the environment. The trigger creates curiosity. The transformation creates the story.

Is the “va va voom” button a real product feature?

No. In this context it functions as a storytelling device that kicks off the prank and reframes the test drive as a fantasy sequence.

What’s the main risk with this style of stunt?

Tone control. If the surprise feels awkward, intrusive, or relies on stereotypes in a way that offends, the conversation can flip from “fun” to “cringe” fast.

Pepsi: Oh Africa Football Superstars

Pepsi: Oh Africa Football Superstars

Football stars set to Akon’s “Oh Africa”

A Pepsi ad featuring Akon’s “Oh Africa” and football stars like Henry, Messi, Drogba, Arshavin, Lampard and Kaká.

How the spot is built: soundtrack plus star density

The mechanism is pure scale. A single anthem-like track sets the emotional tempo, then a rapid parade of elite players does the rest. That star density, meaning how quickly recognisable names appear on screen, plus the track acting as an audio spine, the one piece of music carrying the whole film, makes it feel bigger than a product message because the film is structured like a football event, not a traditional brand pitch.

In global FMCG sponsorship marketing, music and star power are used as compression tools to deliver tournament-level energy in seconds.

Why it lands: it turns a commercial into a moment

This works because the viewer already understands the code. Big match atmosphere, heroic framing, quick edits, and a track that signals “anthem”. Because the anthem-like track sets a shared emotional frame and the rapid star parade signals “event”, the brand does not have to over-explain anything and the audience fills in the meaning.

Extractable takeaway: When you borrow the codes of a real event, one clear audio spine plus fast recognisability can make a sponsorship film feel like culture first and branding second.

What Pepsi is really buying with “Oh Africa”

This is about cultural association, not product features. The “Oh Africa” release is also positioned as more than entertainment, with proceeds linked to helping underprivileged African youth via Akon’s Konfidence Foundation. That adds purpose framing to what could otherwise be a straight celebrity-sponsorship film.

The real question is whether you are sponsoring the sport, or sponsoring the feeling of being part of the sport.

Steal this structure for sponsorship-led spots

  • Use one strong audio spine. A recognisable track can carry mood faster than copy.
  • Front-load recognisable faces. Star density buys attention when the viewer is scrolling or channel-hopping.
  • Make the brand platform legible. If there is a “bigger than the ad” idea, thread it through the film rather than adding it at the end.
  • Keep the message simple. Sponsorship films win when they feel like culture first, brand second.

A few fast answers before you act

What is this Pepsi ad in one sentence?

A football-superstar Pepsi spot set to Akon’s “Oh Africa”, designed to feel like a World Cup-scale cultural moment rather than a standard commercial.

Which stars are featured?

The legacy post calls out Henry, Messi, Drogba, Arshavin, Lampard and Kaká as featured players.

What is the core mechanism that makes it work?

Star density plus a strong audio spine. Recognisable faces arrive fast, and the track carries mood without needing heavy explanation.

What sponsorship job is the film trying to do?

Transfer event energy to the brand by making the work feel like culture first and branding second, so the sponsorship reads as “belonging”.

What is the most transferable takeaway?

If you are building a sponsorship-led spot, keep the message simple, front-load recognisability, and use one cohesive audio-visual spine to carry the moment.