Adidas secured the Entertainment Grand Prix at Cannes Lions 2026 on Tuesday with 'Original Forever,' a Britpop-era homage built around the Oasis reunion tour. The campaign, developed with Johannes Leonardo and launched across 38 markets in Q4 2025, carried an estimated media spend of £14 million and drove 2.7 million incremental brand searches in the UK alone during its first six weeks.
The jury's selection marks the second consecutive year a sportswear brand has taken the Entertainment Grand Prix, following Nike's Formula One documentary series in 2025. 'Original Forever' combined a 90-second anthem film directed by Nabil Elderkin with limited-edition Gazelle and Samba colorways tied to Oasis tour dates across Manchester, London, and Edinburgh. The campaign avoided athlete endorsements entirely, instead embedding Adidas within a specific cultural moment—the band's first tour in 15 years—and positioning the Three Stripes as the uniform of a generation returning to stadiums.
The decision reflects a broader shift in jury composition and allocator priorities. Entertainment track judges this year included four family-office principals with luxury-hospitality portfolios and three CMOs from heritage houses, up from zero family-office representation in 2024. Their selection of a nostalgia-led narrative over product-centric work suggests that brand campaigns anchored in cultural licensing and moment-creation are now viewed as higher-signal investments than traditional sports marketing. Adidas shares rose 1.8% in Frankfurt trading Wednesday morning, with analysts at Berenberg noting that Grand Prix wins correlate with 6-9% revenue lifts in the winning category over the subsequent 12 months.
The Oasis partnership itself carries forward implications. Adidas has secured rights to design tour merchandise through December 2026, with royalty structures reportedly in the 12-15% range—above standard music-industry licensing but below luxury collaborations. The brand is now positioning for a second wave tied to the band's North American leg, scheduled for Q2 2026, with early wholesale orders from Nordstrom and Saks suggesting $8-12 million in incremental U.S. revenue. The campaign's success also validates the Johannes Leonardo relationship, which began in 2023 and has now produced two Grand Prix finalists in three years.
Operators should watch for copycat Britpop licensing deals across fashion and spirits categories in Q3 2026, particularly around Blur and Pulp catalog opportunities. Family offices with music-IP portfolios are already fielding inbound from European sportswear brands seeking similar cultural anchor points. The Adidas-Oasis structure—tour merchandise plus limited-edition product drops—is now being shopped to legacy acts with reunion tours scheduled for 2027, including four major announcements expected before year-end.
The Grand Prix also confirms that Cannes jury composition is shifting toward allocators who view campaigns as portfolio signals rather than creative artifacts. When family-office principals and hospitality-development directors control jury votes, the work that wins is the work that telegraphs consumer spending intent. Adidas captured that precisely: a brand betting £14 million that forty-somethings will pay £180 for Gazelles when the right memory is activated.