Coca-Cola launched a World Cup campaign fronted by an AI-generated version of José Mourinho instead of securing the incoming Real Madrid manager for a traditional endorsement deal, according to Digiday. The move sidesteps the cost and complexity of negotiating celebrity appearance rights while preserving the cultural weight of a recognizable figure.
The brand created a synthetic replica of Mourinho to host campaign content tied to World Cup emotions. Coca-Cola did not disclose licensing terms or whether Mourinho granted permission for his digital likeness, but the approach represents a departure from standard celebrity partnership structures where talent appears on set, signs extensive usage rights, and commands fees scaled to global distribution.
The mechanism works because the audience cares less about authenticity than recognition. Mourinho's face and mannerisms trigger the same brand associations whether captured on a shoot day or rendered by a machine learning model. For Coca-Cola, this removes coordination friction with talent schedules, geographic availability, and contract renewal cycles. The brand controls the asset outright once the AI model is trained, eliminating the risk that a celebrity's off-field behavior damages campaign messaging mid-flight.
This matters for physical product brands because celebrity partnerships traditionally lock up marketing budgets in upfront guarantees and usage buyouts. A small beverage brand or packaged goods company cannot afford a six-figure talent deal, but it can license a synthetic likeness or create a composite character trained on public footage. The cost structure shifts from talent fees to production and legal clearance, both of which scale more predictably.
The steal runs in three steps. First, identify a figure whose image is either in the public domain or available through emerging synthetic licensing platforms. Athletes, retired personalities, and historical figures offer the clearest path. Second, commission a synthetic video or voiceover through a vendor like Synthesia or Hour One, specifying the script and visual setting. Budget $2,000 to $8,000 for a short-form asset depending on complexity. Third, clear the legal ground: confirm that your use complies with right-of-publicity laws in your markets and that the synthetic figure does not imply false endorsement. Work with a media attorney for $1,500 to $3,000 in review time.
For a direct-to-consumer brand selling energy drinks, this means you can feature a synthetic coach figure delivering motivational messaging without booking a real trainer or negotiating residuals. For a snack brand, you can deploy a composite chef character across product launch cycles without renegotiating each campaign. The asset remains consistent, the messaging stays on-brand, and you avoid the schedule and cost volatility that comes with human talent.
The broader shift is this: as synthetic media becomes legally defensible and culturally acceptable, brands will treat celebrity likeness as a licensable input rather than a partnership requiring ongoing relationship management. Coca-Cola is testing the boundary. Smaller brands should watch the legal response and prepare to move when the path clears.
The takeaway
Synthetic celebrity lets you deploy recognizable figures without talent fees, schedules, or renewal risk.
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