Aubrey Blaza Is Having a Mountain Dew Baja Blast in Super Bowl Ad (2024)

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For the first Super Bowl ad in Mountain Dew Baja Blast history, PepsiCo brought in Aubrey Plaza and her former Parks and Recreation costar Nick Offerman to try to contain their enthusiasm.

Earlier this year, PepsiCo announced that Mountain Dew Baja Blast—a favorite of Chalupa-stockpiling, Nacho Fry-chasing, Crunchwrap-decimating Taco Bell patrons for the past two decades—would be available in bottles and cans for the first time.That merited an extraordinarily wry ad for Super Bowl 58—created by Goodby, Silverstein & Partners—that only White Lotus and Emily the Criminal star Plaza could deliver.

While being battered with pool noodles by children, abducted by aliens, trapped in an elevator, attacked by online gamers, frog splashed by wrestlers, heavily sequined in a nightclub and tucked away in a suburban storm drain like a demon clown, Plaza maintains her monotone and her bottle of Blast. Only astride a flying, Game of Thrones-style dragon—next to one piloted by Offerman—does she acknowledge the blast she’s having by rearing back and offering a cackle just before her beast sets fire to a village.

The 30-second commercial is slated to run during the Big Game’s first quarter and adds to the growing roster of celebrities appearing in Super Bowl commercials this year. According to television advertising data and analytics platform EDO, Big Game spots featuring celebrities have outperformed those without by 25% over the past three years.

Data and analytics company System1 noted that 62% of Super Bowl ads during the past four years have included celebrities. This strategy has increased short-term sales and brand recognition, but it has struggled to produce long-term results.

“Almost 20% of viewers leave Super Bowl ads not being able to recall what brand the ad was for,” said Jon Evans, System1’s chief customer officer. “This is causing serious wastage.”

System1 notes that the use of a fluent device—either a character or slogan specific to the brand—tends to have a greater impact than a celebrity alone. “Having a Blast” is a step in that direction, but PepsiCo is starting to blend both celebrities and mascots into a potent marketing mix.

The Mountain Dew Baja Blast spot is just one of three Super Bowl ads from PepsiCo, with Starry also making its Super Bowl debut by pairing Ice Spice with fawning mascots Lem and Lime, while Jenna Ortega and Danny Ramirez face the wizened, well-dressed wrath of Doritos Dinamita fans Dina and Mita.

Mountain Dew as a larger brand has been absent from the game since 2021, when its Major Melon bottle-counting contest ranked No. 48 on the USA Today Ad Meter. A Shining-themed Mountain Dew Zero Sugar ad placed No. 19 in 2019, while Mountain Dew Kickstart’s 2016 viral magnum opus, Puppy Monkey Baby—the first Mountain Dew Super Bowl ad since 2000—landed at No. 55

For the latest Super Bowl 58 advertising news—who’s in, who’s out, teasers, full ads and more—check out Adweek’s Super Bowl 2024 Ad Tracker and the rest of our stories here. And join us on the evening of Feb. 11 for the best in-game coverage of the commercials.

CREDITS

GS&P

Creative

Chief creative officer: Margaret Johnson

Executive creative directors: Matthew Edwards, Wesley Phelan

Associate creative directors: Anthony DiMichele, Jen Hart

Design director: Tana Cieciora

Account Services

Managing partner: Brian McPherson

Group account director: Becca Morris

Account director: Jena Verlin Windmueller

Account manager: Aimee Fung

Assistant account manager: Elizabeth Gordon

Brand and Communication Strategy

Partner, head of brand strategy: Bonnie Wan

Partner, head of communication strategy: Christine Chen

Strategy director: Nik Poon

Communications strategist: Charlotte Cordova

Production

Director of production: Jim Haight

Senior producer: Kateri McLucas

Business Affairs

Director of business affairs: Judy Ybarra

Business affairs manager: Howie Mapson

PRODUCTION PARTNERS

Production Company

O Positive

Production company city: New York

Director: Jim Jenkins

Director of photography: Matthew Libatique

Executive producer: Ralph Laucella

EP/producer: Marc Grill

Editorial Company

Cabin Editing

Editing company city: Los Angeles

Editor: Nick Rondeau

Assistant editor: Brad Dupuie

Managing director: Adam Becht

Executive producer: Britt Carson

Senior producer: Katy Lester Zamora

Audio and Sound Design Company

Sonic Union

Sound design company city: New York

Sound designers/mix engineers: Steve Rosen, Owen Shearer, Kelly Oostman

Mix assistant: Carly Morgan

Studio director: Justine Cortale

VFX Company

Parliament

VFX supervisor: Nathan Kane

Creative leads: Dan Fine, Kay Khanna

Creative team: Taner Besen, Dhruv Shankar, Franz Kol, Seon Crawford, Michael Marsek, Cesar Zambelli, Juan ‘JZ’ Zavala, Steve Beck, Martin Gunnarsson, Gianluca DiMarco, Nathan Mckenna, Sue Jang, Ashley Thomas

Production team: Anna Kravtsov, Caroline Goujard

Color Company

Company name: Royal Muster

Color grade: Roslyn Di Sisto

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Aubrey Blaza Is Having a Mountain Dew Baja Blast in Super Bowl Ad (2024)

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