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How brands brought sunshine in 2025

There was so much that was wrong and chaotic about the world in 2025, but there were also moments that brought delight to everyone. And whatever your feelings about globalisation and cynical marketing, there is something very powerful about a brand that creates an authentic human connection and, in doing so, plays a small role in buffering us from the troubles of everyday life. When we look back at the general helter-skelter of 2025, these are the life-rafts of consumerist cheese that I will cling to.

We all want some K-Pop magic, image by Joseph Costa

Who can begrudge the ongoing juggernaut of K-Pop which reached new heights with a film that struck a chord with people of all ages. K-Pop has been lauded for articulating the fears of teens and tweenagers – loneliness, the pressures of social media, and friendships – and K-Pop Demon Hunters, whose soundtrack has dominated the charts for several weeks with hits including Golden, What it Sounds Like and Takedown, brought a ray of sunshine into all our lives. Talking of K-Pop, I loved this series which, in an unashamedly cheesy way, set out to find members of a multinational K-Pop group. Now making waves as Katseye.

Toilet Paper: the Who Gives A Cr*p brand has been around for a while, rising from the ashes of post-sustainable consumerism after the pandemic. This year, with their eye-catching patterns and commitment to giving 50% of their profits to water and sanitation projects, this loo roll has put a bit of joy and purpose into the most mundane of daily tasks, becoming a common find in family homes across South London (despite being sadly inappropriate for school craft projects). 

Image by Jonathan Borba

Is the high street making a comeback? After years of grill-fronted shops, rubbish swirling through empty multi-story carparks and tattered To Let signs, the high street is being rejuvenated by the faux-independent coffee shop: Blank Street, Black Sheep Coffee, Buns from Home and Crosstown. These are brands that have been in the UK for a while but have been turbo-boosted by global investors and are providing a more acceptable (better coffee and less care worn) alternative to Costa and Starbucks. All sporting an androgynous Skandi-Manhatten vibe, there is something deliciously bland that you can’t quite put your finger on but, at the same time, they have nothing of the motorway service station about them. Expect one or more in a high street near you.

Beautiful Croydon picture by Kristin Snippe

Can they make up for the baffling high street rebrand of WH Smith, though? Possibly not. Could the fading stationer’s name change to TG Jones be the best-worst PR campaign ever? Quite possibly, judging by the hundreds of column inches the unusual move has produced. It’s almost as if they want to create an anti-brand, but there is a skill in turning a terrible story into an unlikely money-spinner. WH Smith is making chunky if controversial steps in the captive airport market and something tells me this story isn’t quite over yet.

Talking of high streets, I hear Croydon is finally in line for a long due glow-up. Not only has its erstwhile suitor, Westfields, finally started the planning process to redo the very forlorn Whitgift Centre, but Croydon is apparently a hotspot for filming and was recently used as the location for the forthcoming blockbuster Heads of State. The ‘Cronx’s gritty 1960s centre combined with proliferation of green spaces apparently make it the ideal dupe for everything from Istanbul to Gotham City and therefore of course the UK’s answer to Hollywood. 

Other things that have united us this year: Wicked, a hot bed of at times hilarious brand tie ups (from Cambridge Satchell Company to Hovis) and a wonderful example of adoring female friendship between its co-stars Cynthia Eviro and Arianna Grande. And, staying in the world of celebrity, Justin Trudeau and global pop superstar Katy Perry, who went official on X during their visit to the Japanese PM and his wife, in a way that summed up the sheer joyful randomness of this romance .

Poor Louvre: image by Michael Fousert

There have been hundreds of brand fails and PR disasters of course. The Louvre’s not had a great one and Ben and Jerry’s very public spat with Magnum lacks a certain amount of dignity. But the point is that, for all their baggage and corporate clutter, brands can still be very powerful, bring positivity and strike a chord with the cultural zeitgeist, if they manage to get it right. I can’t wait to see who does it best in 2026.
December 2025


Featured

2024 in comms: who and what got us talking in a year of change?

How did 2024 change the way you think about comms? What can Keir Starmer learn from Taylor Swift, how have divisive rebrands become a thing (it wasn’t just Jaguar who took the plunge this year), and what did Nokia and Mango do to navigate the tech/ anti-tech dichotomy? Here’s what I learnt about the value of good PR and managing your brand in a year of change:

Credit: Isaac Smith

Keir Starmer struggled a little with his new identity as Prime Minister, even mistakenly referring to outgoing Tory leader Rishi Sunak as Prime Minister at the dispatch box.. But as things remain difficult at home, the PM is beginning to see that his greatest opportunity is to become a statesman. And image is everything. There’s nothing as effective as appearing alongside established premiers to underline your global leader credentials.  See him grow into the role in 2025 with more international jet setting.

Leading with diplomacy and dignity comes naturally to Taylor Swift who manages to find opportunities for altruism whilst conquering all before her. She balances the two identities of savvy business women with purveyor of all things fun and good in order to have the broadest appeal of any entertainer on the planet. Impressive, given that she is not afraid to stray into the political or call someone out if required. Her ability to navigate tricky waters is unrivalled. Who else will manage to copy the Taylor playbook in 2025?

Credit: Stephen Mease

This year we learnt that a good rebrand must cause a sensation. There will always be people who hate a sweeping change (especially one that plays into the fear of Millennials and Gen X that relevancy is slipping away from them) but controversy should be welcomed as it yields dozens of column inches and weeks of discussion on LinkedIn. Rebrands are necessary in a changing world as Jaguar and the Royal Ballet and Opera (formally Royal Opera House) showed us this year, abandoning their heritage and modernising their look and feel to keep up with markets. As their new looks become established and accepted, watch out for more brands taking the plunge in 2025.

The tech/ anti-tech dichotomy continues as big companies compete in the AI arms race but struggle to placate concerned parents taking smart phones away from their children. Whilst humanity struggles with the hows and wherefores, some brands are making the most of it, including Mango who revealed their first AI ads and Puma who introduced their AI ambassador.. On the other hand, 11 year olds took dumb phones to school (which Nokia is very happy about) and CDs finally made a comeback. I even hear HMV is reappearing on our High streets. Nevertheless, there is still a thirst for someone to step in to lay down some guidelines. All eyes are on Australia who introduced a social media ban for under 16s. Look out for campaigners and governments wrestling with this in 2025.

December 2024

Featured

Don’t shoot the messenger!

Finally a podcast that gives PRs a voice

Credit: Juja Han

I never fail to get a feeling of joy on Tuesdays when I listen to the weekly instalment of When It Hits the Fan. A podcast fronted by two titans of media and PR: David Yelland, former editor of the Sun, and Simon Lewis, a Chief of Comms to the late Queen and Prime Minister Gordon Brown amongst many other incredible roles. Here is a podcast that speaks directly to me. A delicious treat as my train rushes through South London on cold dark mornings.

As a care-worn PR of twenty long years, I am used to the idea that PR has no voice of its own. We are vessels of other people’s information, our job is to come up with the most resonant and evocative way to present it… But it’s far more complicated than that. Diplomacy, people management and navigating internal (and external) politics are the true skills you need to bring to the job. It’s part of the thrill, of course, which keeps us in the game, but you can’t really speak about these things.  All that stuff needs to be kept firmly under the bonnet.

Credit: Viktor Forgacs

Until David and Simon (yes, I’m going to use their first names) entered my life, I’d never come across people talking openly about the good, the bad and the ugly of all PRs do. And it is fascinating: why people say things when they say it, how they pull levers of power to achieve their goals, the unintended consequences when they mess up..the sheer randomness of why things happen, even in No 10, at national newspapers…when the best people in the business are making the decisions. Recent episodes have covered the political role of Elon Musk and X; the battle for the Chancellor of Oxford – and why that’s a big deal; the most disastrous PR failures and how to come back from them; why Jaguar know what they’re doing.. and the power and mastery of ‘bikeshed PR’. And of course the ins and outs of the Murdoch dynasty, a mind-boggling story unfolding right now. Their experience and insights are fascinating and endlessly entertaining. It is a delight to learn from their wisdom, and I feel a strong sense of recognition too.

Credit: Thomas Charters

When It Hits the Fan avoids the pitfall that some comms commentary falls into. It’s so easy to come across as too virtuous, or navel gazing, or with a forced earnestness that gives the impression you’re trying to justify being a PR. (By the way, I’m sure I’m guilty of this all the time.) David and Simon manage to bring their massively fascinating experience to the conversation in a brilliantly entertaining way, along with insight into the big personalities at the heart of comms and the press, and the reality that it’s not all a basket of roses.

If you’ve not discovered it yet, give it a listen.

December 2024

Featured

The politics of names

A little label that tells you everything..

Credit: Deniz Fuchidzhiev

Shortly after they won the recent general election on a massive majority, Labour announced they were changing the name of one of the government’s departments. This often happens when a new party gets into power – a signal of the structure and strategy behind their plan for running the country. What made this name change particularly politically significant was that Labour scrapped the Department for Leveling Up, Housing and Communities (‘Leveling Up’ being the right wing Tories’ great battle cry) and replaced it with the less flashy, more homey, name of the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government. With the emphasis shifted to ‘Communities’, a concept everyone can get behind, and a commitment by Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner to ‘no more gimmicks’. In fairly short order, signs were ripped down, emails replaced and the department moved on to its next life. For Labour it is a simple but decisive signal that they are doing away with the rhetoric of the last government and all the baggage that carries, and bringing their own ethos to the table. The return to common sense and straight-forward politics echoes the wider messaging and personal brand of Prime Minister Keir Starmer (who himself has carried the legacy of his given name, reminiscent of the founder of the Labour Party Keir Hardie, into a life of public service).

Changing a name can come across as superficial, as if there is something slightly ‘not done’, even suspicious, about it. Boris Johnson was mocked for not using his first name Alexander as was former Tory Chancellor George (Gideon) Osborne. Changing your name can seem to be an affectation, a signal that the name changer is not genuine. Although the reasons people do change their names are myriad, and often tell the story of lives and histories which the names’ owner is seeking to shape for the better, or to move away from threat or trauma.

Credit: Nataliya Melnychuk

But names – the advert for the substance, are very powerful. They are the linchpin of brands, and they inevitably shape what a thing is and how it is perceived. On starting her mega beauty label Goop, Gwyneth Paltrow consulted a brand expert famous for advising some of Silicon Valley’s most successful companies, who told her that single syllable words with a long double letter sound get traction most easily. Goop may seem babyish at first hearing, but the sound evokes the simplicity of a dollop of cream on one’s hand, and the devil-may-care cheekiness/ low level shock factor associated with many of the brand’s products – like vagina candles. 

Credit: Shyam Mishra

Brands changing names, or having names in different markets, is a source of fascination, urban myth almost, that underlines the importance of language in cultural life. When the chocolate bar Marathon rebranded as Snickers (already its American name) in 1990, it symbolised to many the Americanisation of UK culture and the increased fluidity of cultural understanding between two countries. Elon Musk understood the power of changing a name to shock when he changed Twitter to X. The new nihilistic title seemed to represent everything that was doomed about the Musk take over of what had become a cultural institution. Yet Musk had the power to do this and so he did and, slowly, we have been forced to accept this change. Eventually the Twitter that it once was will likely fade from public memory. Perhaps we thought we owned Twitter as a social platform that formed part of public life, and this is his way of reminding us that we do not. And that he holds the power. 

Credit: Marten Bjork

Names and naming will always be associated with power. Nothing is more powerful than a parent choosing the name for the child that they will bear for the rest of their life; and place names have always been tied to ownership and culture. The renaming of cities and countries across the world was a fundamental part of reclamation post colonialism. Some cities – like Derry/Londonderry – have arrived more or less at a compromise of two names, a recognition of two perennially different cultures living side by side after a long period of difficulties, and perhaps an acknowledgment that this history can never be undone. Other places have two names acknowledged by different groups but not by one another, and all the hurt and vanished histories that represents hang waiting for recognition, and the complex dynamic between who holds the power and who does not.

And so now in the UK, Labour hold power and they (and we) are in the process of finding out the pros and cons of this new set of circumstances. A mostly moderate left wing government, they are unlikely to proceed to change place names with abandon, but the new Ministry for Housing, Communities and Local Government is their reminder that the old guys are gone. 

August 2024

Featured

How to behave in public (What ballet has taught me about life)

Photo by Hannah Busing on Unsplash

On a recent Saturday night at the Royal Opera House, the audience was looking forward to the ballet Different Drummer; a serious work by one of the twentieth century’s most influential choreographers, Kenneth MacMillan. The ballet, based on the German drama Woyzeck, builds to a tense moment when the girlfriend of the main character, the tragic soldier, is lured away by another man. On this night, just when the girlfriend turned away from Woyzeck to look longingly back at her new suitor, the music was interrupted by the sound of shattering glass from the upper slips – the very furthest away seats to the top and side of the auditorium. A slow handclap was followed by scuffles and protests, as someone tried to intervene with whoever it was who was making a ruckus. The protests began quietly at first – as people started to crane irritably away from the performance to see what was going on – before getting louder and finally a scream ‘I just want to enjoy the f–king music!’, before the poor man was ushered out of the room and the drama, off stage at least, was over.

You do hear about audience behaviour taking a nosedive in the West End, but this almost never happens in ballet. It would have been a shock at any ballet performance to have the audience convention of silence broken in such a forceful and unexpected way. But coming at such a tense point in a dark and soul-wrenching ballet, the moment was heightened and the uncertainty about what might prevail was quite disconcerting – as if what was happening on and off stage were somehow weaving themselves together. After the show, the audience chatted amongst themselves in anxious voices, and tones of awe, about how shocking the outburst had been and what could have been done by Opera House management to prevent such a situation escalating. They carried on discussing it in taxis, on the tube and on online forums.  

Photo by Hulki Okan Tabak on Unsplash

The incident made me reflect that we live in a world where in public at least we are to behave in certain ways. You don’t even think about these conventions being there, until they are broken. The shock of someone breaking that convention at the ballet rippled through the audience in a tangible way, almost lending itself to a thrill. We are often told that, in Shakespeare’s day, the audience would heckle, carry on conversations and throw fruit (although they haven’t reintroduced this at the Globe..); and Edith Wharton’s accounts of high society in turn of the century Manhattan pivot around the great and the good carrying on their socialising in their expensive opera boxes while the performance was going on down on the stage. But this is not the norm or the expectation nowadays.

There are practical reasons for people to be silent, and for large groups of people to behave in a certain way so that order can prevail, and events can proceed as planned. But at the same time, the almost salacious shock at the interruption of Different Drummer suggests that these social conventions take on more than a pragmatic purpose. In 1903, a sociologist called George Simmel spoke about the ‘impulse to sociability’ where humans have an instinct to behave in a way that is socially acceptable and enables them to belong to a particular group – or society in general. It’s a concept that has often been used derogatively, for instance in inferring that people don’t think for themselves and blindly follow fashions and trends without exerting their own creativity. But actually, we all have good reasons to conform, even if it means giving up some of our individual autonomy from time to time.

Photo by Abigail Lynn on Unsplash

Non-conformity can be powerful and can used as protest to demonstrate disagreement or dissent about something that is happening. A famous example was when musician Jarvis Cocker stormed the stage of the Brit Awards in 1996 to show his disgust at Michael Jackson performing a very self-reverential song, dressed as a Christ-like figure. Cocker mounted the stage and shook his bum at the audience – hundreds of thousands of people watching the awards on live TV. Cocker got away with it, largely because many people agreed with him even though they wouldn’t have dreamt of doing it themselves, and there was something in his personality and credibility that allowed him to carry it off. Cocker presumably calculated that he had nothing to lose by getting onto the stage, and it proved to be the case, as shown by his continuing success and popularity over the next twenty years. Going further, there are occasions when groups of people actually rebel against conventional behaviour as a herd. The documentary Woodstock 99 shows a wide-scale loss of order after festival goers endured terrible conditions including the lack of food and water, unbearable heat, and ground saturated by sewage. After three days of this, the crowd erupted in a riot, destructing the temporary structure that had been set up for the festivals, setting fires, rape and pillage. The mass momentum to act like this was prompted by a breakdown in the social contract made by the festival organisers to the people who had paid to attend, in turn triggering the festival goers to forsake social norms en masse. The chaos was only brought to a close with the arrival of a large consignment of the national guard.

Van Kleef, Wanders, Stamkou and Homan is a review of research and literature around norm violation and plots out a model of factors that influence norm violation and our responses to it. They point out that minor norm violations such as leaving the remains of your lunch on the table and interrupting each other during conversations are ‘omnipresent’. They looked into the factors which make ‘rule breaking’ of this nature more likely and found two factors which influence whether people violate norms. One factor is that people are more likely to violate norms when they perceive others also break the rules – which may account for the festival goers at Woodstock rioting in response to being let down by the festival organisers. The article says that in these cases ‘societal level norms about how one ought to behave may be overruled by local norms that are constructed based on the perceived behaviour of others in one’s social environment.’  The other factor is that people who feel more powerful in a situation are more likely to break norms. In other words, Jarvis Cocker is unlikely to have stormed the stage at the Brit awards if he had been a waiter serving drinks or a member of public who just happened to have a ticket.

The third point in the article is the impact that norm violation can have on other people. The study finds that norm violations trigger feelings of anger, blame, anxiety and fear, even when no personal harm is involved. What’s more, ‘ingroup deviants’ (ie people who are part of a group or society where those norms are established) are regarded more harshly than ‘outgroup deviants’. This can explain the disgust and shock of the members of audience who, after the performance, could only discuss the behaviour of the gentleman at the ballet. Van Kleef, Wanders, Stamkou and Homan say that gossip has been found to foster norm compliance as people endorse the violation of certain norms to defend other norms that are seen as more important. The need to discuss and condemn the behaviour of that particular member of the audience was a way of reinforcing the norms of that group – ie regular attendees of the ballet – and perhaps even the bonds between members of that group as people who are committed to appreciating ballet as an art form.

May 2024

Featured

Why politics needs comedy in a time of crisis

A ray of sunshine and a political lifeline – my take on the breakout TikTok stars of the Covid-19 crisis

When the Covid crisis escalated in the UK and it became clear that we needed to lock down and fast, we all turned to the government and, in particular, Boris Johnson for direction. We were prepared to put aside months and years of Brexit-fuelled political turmoil, if he could provide leadership, instruction and reassurance at a frankly scary time.

John Bull taking a Luncheon – James Gillray, 1798

A few months down the line, things look different. We’ve arrived, via some of the highest death rates in the world, confusing and contradictory messaging, and a host of U-turns (not to mention that little bank-holiday busting Cummings-special) at a point where public trust in the government has steadily eroded and Labour under Kier Starmar have come within touching distance of leading the polls, just months after a government landslide.

We’ve gone through three months of hard times, and goodness knows what is yet to come. But people are inherently resourceful and there are small rays of sunshine that have helped us through the relentless bad news. Two TikTok stars have come to the fore during the darkest days of lockdown. The States have Sarah Cooper, lip-syncing perfectly to Donald Trump, somehow managing to capture his absurdities in the dart of her eyes and making us chuckle at his most alarming pronouncements. On this side of the Atlantic, there’s Meggie Foster with her on-the-nose, sideways re-enactments of the latest political contretemps (see here for her portrayal of Rosina Allen-Khan and Matt Hancock at couples counselling). This hilarious satirist, who made appearances this week in Vogue and on Lorraine, has risen from obscurity in a matter of months. Her ability to appeal to everyone from the casual news consumer to the obsessive political geek has made her the breakout star of this political lockdown.

There is something about political satire that helps us endure times when we feel helpless and frustrated by the apparent irrationality of the people whom we have to trust to lead us. We’ve just had an election and it’s unlikely that the current administration is going anywhere soon. But being able to laugh at them gives us a feeling of control, it helps us navigate our feelings of anger and doubt, and it allows us to bond (virtually of course) with others who feel the same.  

Political satire grew big in the 18th Century, as the nascent middle class became increasingly politically engaged. People became more aware of inequalities between the rich and the poor, were frustrated by the outrageous extravagances of the Prince Regent, and the weakness of the nation in losing the American war of independence. (The military were too interested in getting their uniforms looking good to go out and fight – and Instagram didn’t even exist at that point).

It was in this context that political cartoons lampooning politicians and royalty were pioneered by William Hogarth and taken to unrivalled levels of both the sublime and the ridiculous by James Gillray. These cheaply produced prints surged in popularity and were knocked out in their thousands from a little shop in St James’ to reflect the latest goings on in Parliament, world events and the internal power struggles of the Georgian royal household. These cartoons were entertainment, but they also played a vital role in political education and helped that new political class come together. This ultimately led to the evolution of British politics into the locally-resourced party system we know today.

We have seen a similar political evolution taking place in the last ten years, with the rise of online campaigning. Lockdown has only served to make this virtual world more pronounced. It is fitting that Cooper and Foster, as today’s Gillray and Hogarth, come to us in TikTok form. They may use a 21st Century platform but they are similarly hilarious, instantly digestible and incisive in the commentary they make. Like the original political satirists, they have a universal appeal that unites people in relief and a renewed vigour to change politics for a better place.

18th June 2020