Marketing Brew // Morning Brew // Update
Inside InStyle’s mockumentary-style approach to social video.

It’s Wednesday. Happy April Fools’ Day, aka every marketer’s dream—or worst nightmare, depending on how you look at it. Pranks we’ve spotted so far include “Peachy Clean” butt wipes from Olipop and Goodwipes, an NHL locker room–scented odor-eliminator product from Azuna and the Buffalo Sabres, and Dude Wipes’s honestly shocking-looking “Butt Massk.” Potty humor lives on.

In today’s edition:

—Katie Hicks, Alyssa Meyers, Jasmine Sheena

SOCIAL & INFLUENCERS

Instyle TikTok

Morning Brew Design, Photos: @instyle/TikTok

This story is the latest in a series exploring how brands craft standout social media strategies. If you’d like to chat about how your brand is approaching social, Katie Hicks wants to hear about it. Reach out to her at hicks@morningbrew.com.

A mouse in the office. A fish fillet in the microwave. An employee locked in a closet. All of these relatable office situations have made for the basis of InStyle magazine’s social-first mockumentary series The Intern.

In the year since it debuted, all eight seasons and 40-plus episodes of The Intern have generated more than 36 million views. The Boss, its newest series that premiered in February, so far has 2.3 million views.

InStyle’s editor in chief, Sally Holmes, told us that both series are meant to be “entertaining first,” rather than traffic-drivers. Yet they stand out as a new way of bringing InStyle to a new generation. The magazine now counts more than 15 million followers across social channels.

“It has been fun to watch the comments from people who discovered InStyle through [The Intern],” Holmes said. “When I was a teenager, I waited for InStyle magazine to come in the mail…and now for the new generation of teenagers, what that looks like is, ‘I can’t wait for my new show to drop on social.’”

As print media continue to face numerous business challenges, InStyle has turned The Intern into a monetizable vessel, with brands like Fossil and e.l.f. Cosmetics appearing in certain episodes. Additional sponsors, Holmes said, are already on board for new series ideas.

“What has made this successful is that we are doing something that is true to us and our brand and people like it,” Holmes said. “Then we figured out how to monetize that.”

Continue reading here.—KH

Presented by Outreach

SPORTS MARKETING

Basketball players posing in Dick's March Madness campaign ad.

Dick’s Sporting Goods

It’s every young athlete’s dream to get scouted. And while that experience typically goes down on the court, in one March Madness campaign, it happens on the floor of a Dick’s Sporting Goods.

To close out the college hoops season, the retailer partnered with Nike for a campaign called “The Scouts are Out,” which stars WNBA legend Diana Taurasi and rapper and comedian Dave Burd, aka Lil Dicky, as scouts looking for the next generation of basketball stars at Dick’s stores. The campaign includes a series of spots that also feature Nike, Jordan Brand, and Converse athletes like Jayson Tatum, Sabrina Ionescu, and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander.

The basketball vertical is a “critical business” for Dick’s, and “The Scouts are Out” represents a significant step into the sport in terms of marketing efforts, VP of Brand Building Melissa Christian said. While Dick’s has run March Madness campaigns before and included basketball as one of many sports in other ads, this campaign is one of the first from the brand focused exclusively on basketball, she said.

Despite the emphasis on the sport, the aspirational tone and overall plot of the ads are meant to appeal to non-basketball fans, too, in an effort to drive engagement and sales.

“There’s so much rich storytelling that happens around these student athletes competing at such an elite level,” Christian told Marketing Brew. “It just draws everyone in.”

Read more here.—AM

Together With Instacart Ads

TV & STREAMING

YouTube on a TV set

Kaspars Grinvalds/Adobe Stock

If there were three takeaways from YouTube’s 2026 NewFronts announcements this year, we’d boil it down to this: creators, creators, and creators. Which is not to be confused with last year’s YouTube NewFronts which were also about…creators.

The Rise of the Creator may sound like a new Star War, but it’s clear that “creator” has entered big-business territory, and it’s something marketers want to tap into. According to IAB’s November 2025 report on the creator economy and ad spend, creator ad spend “is projected to reach $37 billion in 2025, up 26% year over year and nearly 4x faster than the media industry’s overall growth. YouTube, of course, is a major creator hub, and this year, the platform is rolling out new tools for brands to connect with creators, complete with new features powered by Google Gemini.

“Creators are no longer just competing for attention. They’re winning it,” Anne Marie Nelson-Bogle, YouTube ads marketing VP, said onstage at YouTube’s NewFronts presentation in New York. “Influencer marketing was just a piece of your larger strategy, and now creative partnerships are at the core of your campaigns.”

Continue reading here.—JS

Together With NinjaCat

EVENTS

Morning Brew Inc

Morning Brew Inc.

Join us at POSSIBLE for a private lunch where the main course is a conversation on what actually breaks through today. We’ll explore how AI is changing the landscape, why creators and communities matter more than ever, and what marketers are doing to keep up. Come hungry for insights (and actual lunch).

FRENCH PRESS

French Press

Morning Brew

There are a lot of bad marketing tips out there. These aren’t those.

r/media: New insights from Reddit’s expanded access to publisher tools.

Listening and learning: What to know about the Netflix-Warner Music deal.

Wedding bells: Advice on appealing to Gen Z couples tying the knot.

Selling made smarter: Outreach’s AI agents can connect the full revenue cycle, from prospecting + managing deals to forecasting + expansion. See how it helps teams act faster, prioritize the right deals, and execute with consistency. Book a demo.*

*A message from our sponsor.

PODCAST

a collage from the latest Marketing Brew Weekly episode featuring the three hosts and images of April Fools' Day stunts discussed on the show

Morning Brew Inc.

Eyes will roll! This week’s episode of Marketing Brew Weekly takes a look at the brands brave enough to attempt an April Fools’ prank on their customers, but(t) beware: It can backfire on those that do it too well—or too wrong.

A two part graphic of a hand holding a card that reads 'You're Invited!' and a smiling woman scrolling on phone

Illustration: Brittany Holloway-Brown, Photos: Adobe Stock

As online spaces grow more crowded, creators are taking control offline. Explore why creators are hosting their own in-person events (from meetups to run clubs), how these IRL moments build deeper community and new revenue streams, and why brands are increasingly eager to plug into experiences that are creator-led, not algorithm-driven.

Check it out

METRICS AND MEDIA

Stat: 80%. That’s the percentage of firms surveyed by the National Bureau of Economic Research that said AI has had “no measurable impact on productivity,” with 70% of them reporting AI usage.

Quote: “What makes my life more uncomfortable is when 50 states start to think about things in 50 different ways.”—Steve Cahillane, Kraft Heinz’s CEO, speaking to the New York Times about how Health Secretary RFK Jr.’s focus on ultraprocessed foods is affecting the company

Read: “The luxury birth center breaking hearts on the Upper East Side” (The Cut)

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