Budweiser: Poolball, football on a pool table

Budweiser: Poolball, football on a pool table

Coming to a Buenos Aires pub near you is the newly minted sport of Poolball, created by Ogilvy Argentina for Budweiser.

Two teams meet on a giant 7×3 meter pool table. Fifteen soccer balls are reskinned to look like pool balls. The competitors use their feet instead of cues to score.

A new bar sport with a brand stitched into it

Poolball takes two things that already belong in the same evening. Football and beer. Then it adds a third. The “I could play that” simplicity of pool. The result feels less like a stunt and more like a playable product.

Extractable takeaway: Poolball is a brand activation that fuses two familiar games into one instantly understandable format, so people stop watching and start participating without needing instructions.

The mechanic: one rulebook, two rituals

The mechanic is the entire idea. A pool table scaled up to human size. Pool-ball visuals on footballs. Pool rules translated into foot play. When the mechanic is this legible, the content is self-explaining and the crowd becomes the amplification layer.

BTL is often used as shorthand for below-the-line activity. In practice, it means a brand experience designed to be felt in the real world, then shared because it is worth retelling.

In busy city bars and event spaces, the formats that spread fastest are the ones everyone can read at a glance.

Why it works in a pub

Bar-friendly activations win when they create quick status moments. You either played it, you watched someone nail a shot, or you filmed the chaos. Poolball naturally creates all three, because every “pocket” attempt is a mini highlight.

It also lowers the risk of participation. You are not learning a new sport. You are remixing two you already know, with rules you can copy by watching one play.

The intent behind the fun

The real question is whether your activation is a game people still want to play when the camera is off.

Budweiser is not selling a feature here. It is selling association. Big-game energy. Competitive banter. Social proof that the brand belongs in the centre of group nights out.

When the game is branded but not fragile, the brand becomes the host of the experience rather than the interruption inside it.

Poolball patterns worth stealing

  • Fuse, don’t invent. Combine two known behaviours so the audience understands the format instantly.
  • Make the object the media. A giant playable artefact beats a screen when your goal is participation.
  • Design for highlights. Build in repeatable “shot” moments people want to film and replay.
  • Keep rules visible. If someone can learn it by watching one round, you have the right complexity level.
  • Let branding be structural. Brand the experience itself, not every surface area with logos.

A few fast answers before you act

What is Poolball?

Poolball is a branded game format that combines football and pool. Players kick footballs designed like pool balls on a giant pool table and score using pool-style goals.

Why does this kind of activation travel well across venues?

Because it is easy to understand, easy to spectate, and it produces repeatable highlight moments. Venues like it because it creates crowd energy. Brands like it because the crowd documents it.

What makes the mechanic “shareable” without forcing sharing?

The visual contrast does the work. A human-scale pool table and “pool ball” footballs create an immediate “what is that” reaction, so filming feels natural rather than incentivised.

How do you keep a branded game from feeling like a gimmick?

Make it genuinely playable. Simple rules. Clear scoring. Quick rounds. If the experience is fun without the brand name, the brand credit comes for free.

What’s the minimum viable version of this idea?

A single hybrid rule, one striking physical cue, and one repeatable scoring moment. If people can explain it in one sentence, you have the right foundation.

Golf Digest: Desert Disruption

Golf Digest: Desert Disruption

Golf Digest wanted to remind golf enthusiasts that they can improve their game with the magazine. Rather than saying it in a predictable headline, Memac Ogilvy Dubai chose a faster route to attention. A prank designed to disrupt the region’s biggest golf event and get people to pick up the magazine.

The point is not to out-shout the tournament. It’s to create a moment of interruption that only resolves when you engage with the brand asset sitting right there in your hands.

Disruption as distribution

A prank at a live event works when it forces a choice. Ignore it and stay confused. Or reach for the one object that explains what’s happening. In this case, the magazine becomes the “decoder”, meaning the one object that explains what’s happening, which makes pickup feel like participation, not like being sold to.

In sports event marketing, a well-timed interruption can convert spectators into participants, as long as the payoff is immediate and easy to understand.

Why this lands

This works because it ties the brand benefit to a behaviour you can measure. Magazine in hand. Pages opened. Content consumed. The prank is not the product. It is the trigger that makes people re-experience Golf Digest as a practical tool for better play, instead of as background media. The real question is whether the interruption makes the magazine feel more useful, not merely more visible.

Extractable takeaway: If you need to revive a “useful” product people have stopped actively choosing, design an event moment where the product is the simplest way to regain control and understand what’s going on.

What to steal from event disruption

  • Make the brand the resolution. The disruption should only make sense once someone engages with your asset.
  • Use the right arena. Do it where your core audience is already emotionally invested.
  • Keep the explanation short. If the prank needs a long briefing, the moment dies.
  • Turn interest into a physical action. Pickup, flip, keep. Behaviour beats impressions.

A few fast answers before you act

What is Golf Digest’s “Desert Disruption” idea?

It’s a prank-based event activation designed to interrupt attention at a major golf event and prompt spectators to pick up the magazine as the way to understand the moment.

Why use a prank to sell a magazine?

A prank creates immediate curiosity. If the magazine is positioned as the fastest explanation or payoff, pickup becomes a natural reaction.

What does this communicate about Golf Digest?

That it is not only entertainment. It is positioned as a practical resource for improving your game.

What is the key success condition for this pattern?

The disruption must be legible quickly, and the magazine must clearly resolve the confusion with an instant payoff.

What can go wrong with event disruption?

If it feels unsafe, disrespectful to the sport, or unclear, it can trigger annoyance instead of curiosity. The tone and timing matter as much as the idea.

2010 FIFA World Cup: United on ESPN

2010 FIFA World Cup: United on ESPN

As the World Cup draws to an end this weekend, it feels like a good time to share this ad that captures how this has been that one month, every four years, when we all agree on one thing.

A simple idea, delivered as a fast montage

The spot stacks up all the things people argue about, then flips the frame to the one shared obsession that temporarily overrides the noise. It is not trying to explain football. It is using football as a shortcut to “we are together for a moment.”

In global sports media, the World Cup is one of the rare moments when mass audiences synchronise attention across borders.

The real question is whether your “we” message can hitch itself to a ritual your audience already shares, without the brand feeling like it is forcing the moment.

Why it lands

It works because the insight is instantly recognisable. You do not need to know the teams or the fixtures to feel the shift from division to collective focus. The edit pace does the persuasion, not a long script.

Extractable takeaway: When you want a “unity” message to travel, anchor it in a shared ritual people already practice, then use rhythm and contrast to make the emotional pivot feel inevitable. By a shared ritual, I mean a repeated moment your audience already participates in without you.

What this kind of creative is good for

These films are less about persuasion and more about permission. They legitimise heightened emotion. They give viewers a line they can borrow to describe what they are already feeling. That is why they get replayed and quoted during the tournament run-in.

A unity film earns trust only when it starts from a real, shared behaviour.

What to borrow from ESPN’s United montage

  • Lead with contrast. Show everyday division first, then pivot hard into the shared ritual.
  • Let edit pace do the work. Rhythm and montage can replace exposition when the insight is universal.
  • Anchor unity in something real. A credible collective behaviour beats abstract “togetherness” claims.
  • End on one clean line. A short, repeatable framing gives viewers language to share the feeling.

A few fast answers before you act

What is this ad doing in one sentence?

It contrasts everyday disagreement with a single shared passion, then frames the World Cup as a rare moment of collective unity.

Why is contrast more effective here than “inspiring” footage alone?

Because contrast creates a clear before-and-after. Viewers feel the pivot from fragmentation to togetherness instead of being told about it.

What makes a “unity” sports spot feel authentic?

It reflects real fan behaviour and real tension, then resolves it through a ritual people genuinely share, like watching, cheering, and arguing about football.

How do you adapt this structure outside sport?

Pick a moment where your audience already aligns, then show the everyday differences around it. The shared ritual must be more credible than the brand claim.

What should you avoid when copying this approach?

A generic “we are all one” message with no lived context. Without a specific ritual and a clear pivot, the film becomes wallpaper.