The Faux Collab Frenzy: Are We Out Of Original Ideas or Just Desperate For Press?

Swayzine – Influencer Marketing Insights

I had a moment of marketing déjà vu this morning when I read about the newest collab between Chili’s and Tecovas: cowboy boots covered in Tex-Mex swagger and the same bright shade of vinyl that lines the booths at your local Chili’s. Is anyone asking for this? Or is this just the latest in a parade of “collab for the sake of clout” stunts?

Don’t get me wrong. I see the appeal of a great PR stunt (I once worked on a team that brought baby races to Times Square). But it feels like we’ve entered a new era where oddball collabs are not the exception, but the playbook. It begs the question: in the hunt for viral buzz, have brands started trading creativity for cheap clicks?

Picture of fake brand collabs.

When Collabs Cross Into Cringe

There was a time when a brand partnership meant real synergy or a delightfully absurd surprise. Now? Sometimes it feels like a Mad Libs fever dream. A few “highlights” from recent years:

  • Crocs x KFC: Yes, fried chicken-scented shoes.
  • Oscar Mayer x French’s Mustard Ice Cream: Did anyone really want this?
  • Elf x Chipotle: Eyeshadow “inspired” by guac ingredients.
  • Velveeta x Nails Inc.: Cheese-scented nail polish.

Even the beauty world isn’t safe. Cheetos orange eyeshadow, anyone?

When It Works (And Why)

I don’t want to dunk on every partnership. Some are witty and functional. Just look at Taco Bell x Doritos: The Doritos Locos Taco is still iconic. It was a zeitgeist-capturing hit that, while initially a wild idea, made perfect sense for both brands and became a menu staple with record sales. This is collab marketing actually serving the consumer, literally.

Other collabs, like IKEA x Virgil Abloh or LEGO, managed to surprise, delight, and move product without feeling like a forced meme.

Why This Trend Bugs Me

There’s a difference between playful and pointless. The best collabs feel organic and additive, not engineered just for a viral tweet.

  • PR Stunt Fatigue: Audiences are wise to the routine and snark replaces buzz.
  • Diluting Brand Equity: Enough weird partnerships, and your brand becomes a punchline.
  • The Missed Opportunity: The quick hit of earned media shouldn’t replace products or ideas that actually resonate.

The “Is This Collaboration Genius or Gross?” Litmus Test

My criteria for collabs that work:

  • Does it make sense for both audiences?
  • Is there a genuine, authentic connection?
  • Does it genuinely delight or just raise eyebrows?
  • Will people want to use it, or is it just a photo op?

What’s the Weirdest Collab You’ve Seen?
I want to hear from you: what’s your favorite (or least favorite) brand duo? When do these stunts make you smile, and when do they make you groan?

Danielle

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