McDonald’s has always been more than fast food — it’s a cultural cameo. From Seinfeld punchlines to futuristic sci-fi scenes in The Fifth Element, the Golden Arches keep popping up on our screens.

In 2025, McDonald’s turned those background cameos into the spotlight with its “As Featured In” campaign — a global rollout across 100+ countries featuring billboards, limited meals, exclusive merch, and even an AR Snapchat lens.


🪧 The Campaign Setup

Instead of glossy burger shots, McDonald’s plastered billboards with simple movie callouts:

  • “As Featured In Loki”
  • “As Featured In The Fifth Element”
  • “As Featured In Seinfeld”

The copy was minimal. The strategy was bold: let culture do the selling.

At the same time, McDonald’s launched the “As Featured In Meal”, a combo tied to these cinematic moments. Fans could even scan packaging for an AR filter, turning fries into special effects.


💡 Why It Worked

  • Borrowed credibility: Hollywood had already made McDonald’s iconic. The brand just repackaged that proof.
  • Nostalgia unlock: People remembered that scene — whether it was sci-fi, sitcom, or superhero.
  • Fandom stacking: Each billboard spoke to a different tribe (Marvel stans, retro TV lovers, 90s kids).

🧠 Strategy Lesson

This campaign wasn’t about food photography. It was about owning the role McDonald’s already played in culture.

Instead of inventing a story, they asked:
👉 Where has our brand already starred?
👉 How can we remind people of those moments?

For smaller brands, the lesson is clear:

  • Your product probably already shows up in customer photos, YouTube vlogs, or niche communities.
  • Instead of forcing a new idea, elevate the cameos you already have.

🌍 Cultural Impact

The campaign trended on Instagram and X (Twitter), generating millions of shares. TikTok users stitched famous McDonald’s movie clips with real-time shots of the billboards. And in pure McDonald’s style, the brand dropped exclusive merch collabs with Palace and Cactus Plant Flea Market, turning nostalgia into streetwear hype.


🔑 Takeaway

Great campaigns don’t always invent relevance — they borrow it from culture and remind us it was always there.

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