Every brand needs to be ready for its Maduro Nike tracksuit moment
Brands love to insert themselves into cultural conversations or piggyback on buzzy current events, a strategy sometimes called newsjacking. But it can happen without seeking, or even wanting, the attention. The borderline absurd virality of a Nike tracksuit evidently worn by Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro as he was taken into the custody of American captors is the most high-profile recent example—but it definitely won’t be the last.
This form of what we could call involuntary product placement can be a conundrum for brands, which prefer to be associated with upbeat or positive events, not dictators or controversial geopolitics. And that’s been made even more challenging by a starkly divided political climate that has put brands from Bud Light to Tesla to Hilton in the crossfire, and a hypercharged social media environment that constantly hungers for new angles, riffs, and takes on whatever is hogging the spotlight.
Of course, involuntary product placement isn’t new: If you remember the car chase climaxing in O.J. Simpson’s arrest, you know he was driving a Ford Bronco. Yet unsolicited pop-culture brand cameos aren’t always bad. Ocean Spray, for instance, enjoyed a boost after it accidentally had a starring role in a feel-good viral clip of a skateboarder sipping the drink as Fleetwood Mac’s “Dreams” played. And in a marketing-soaked world, plenty of accidental brand appearances scarcely register.
But that same ubiquity is part of what makes brands such handy and ultimately irresistible signifiers for people to latch on to and exploit—especially now, when they pop up in full-on news spectacles amplified by social media. Spawning instant and endless memes (and, increasingly, AI fakery), these events soak up and repurpose all the relevant cultural material they can, brands very much included.
When a healthcare executive was gunned down in Manhattan in 2024, for example, coverage of the subsequent manhunt included plenty of online scrutiny of his jacket, backpack, and other gear. Since Luigi Mangione was arrested on murder charges for the crime, brand sleuths have continued to obsess over his courtroom style choices, snapping up items like a merino sweater from Nordstrom he wore to his arraignment.
The Maduro tracksuit has brought all this to a new level, attracting attention for how much attention it was attracting. Searches for Nike Tech spiked, and styles and colorways similar to the jacket and pants Maduro wore were selling out; some reviews on the brand’s site seemed to wink at the whole scenario. (“Viva Venezuela!!”) There was something disconcerting about the “presence of a globally recognizable brand in a moment typically governed by the visual codes of state power,” design writer and educator Debbie Millman observed. “Athleisure replaced uniform; a logo supplanted insignia.”
The specific tracksuit “has its own cultural significance,” a New York Times style assessment on the matter reported, and has lately served as a “uniform” of sorts for some rappers and athletes (and their fans). Less seriously, of course, the juxtaposition of a detained head of state and Nike gear was fodder for a slew of ironic meme humor—a “steal his look” parody; the mock slogan “For the gym. For errands. For federal custody,” and so on.
A brand caught up in an involuntary product placement moment certainly doesn’t want to be seen as celebrating the attention. But really any kind of acknowledgment can be fraught.
When the healthcare executive’s killer was still at large, the CEO of Peak Design recognized the shooter’s backpack as one made by his company, reached out to law enforcement—and ended up being threatened by customers who evidently wanted the fugitive to escape.
As for Nike and its tracksuit’s unplanned week in the spotlight, the company swiftly replied to an inquiry from Fast Company, declining any comment. Sometimes when a brand finds its products placed in the middle of the cultural conversation, the best move is to just do nothing and wait quietly until the news moves on.