I don’t do Nike Techs anymore.
I’m a quarter-zip guy.
For the last couple months, the internet has been exploding with the “quarterzip movement.”
Their slogan?
Ditching the old “Nike tech” style and attitude.
Surprisingly, Nike didn’t argue with the trend.
Instead, they turned it into a moment.
Instead of launching another ad or pr campaign, Nike staged a real-world event, a basketball game split down the middle:
Team Nike Tech.
Team Quarter Zip.
Same court.
Same energy.
Different uniforms.
The utilization of popular content creators like Khadim Thiam and Jason Gyamfi to promote the game and represent the two styles significantly contributed to the event's success.
Suddenly, the conversation shifted.
What was once a negative undertone became fuel for storytelling.
Tech vs. Quarter Zip.
Style vs. performance.
Past vs. evolution.
It wasn’t about declaring a winner.
It was about playing along with the culture in a way that felt self-aware, playful, and unmistakably Nike.
That’s smart marketing.
When a brand listens instead of resists, it earns relevance back on its own terms.
Nike didn’t try to erase the “I don’t do Nike Techs anymore” narrative.
They turned it into a stage.
That’s how relevance is reclaimed.
Not by forcing a comeback.
But by designing a moment culture actually wants to talk about.
Bravo Nike
#nike#marketing#niketech#quarterzip
Scrolling through feeds lately, Timothée Chalamet seems to be everywhere.
At first, it feels random.
But it isn’t random at all.
The Marty Supreme campaign is one of the smartest examples of modern marketing in recent memory.
Not because it’s loud.
Not because it’s flashy.
But because it fits.
Every appearance, every clip, every crossover feels intentional, like it belongs in the spaces people are already paying attention to.
It doesn’t feel like promotion.
It feels like culture.
And that’s the difference.
Instead of betting everything on one trailer or one viral moment, the signature orange campaign spreads the story across platforms, formats, and audiences, all while maintaining a consistent tone and identity.
Great marketing today isn’t about forcing awareness.
It’s about showing up in ways that feel natural, consistent, and worth engaging with.
Marty Supreme isn’t everywhere by accident.
It’s everywhere because it understands how people actually consume content now.
That’s the blueprint.
#timotheechalamet#martysupreme#mkmedia
Message from the G Himself🤯
He is one of the creators I grew up watching from the beginning; I first learned AE from his YouTube tutorials. It feels great to receive compliments from someone you admire.🩷
Need an appointment setter to help get me on some more calls, want to expand this business.
Will pay commission on every client you land me.
DM if interested.
I will also admit that at the moment my short-form is super low effort. But the idea is to be as consistent as possible, garner an audience and hopefully monetize on a platform, THEN I can spend a bit more time on better quality content. Right now I need exposure 💯