68Signal
Score
F
FastCompanyby María José Gutiérrez ChávezJuly 2, 2026

The Empire State Building climbing stunt is now brand-trend slop

The recent climbing stunt at the Empire State Building highlights the growing trend of brands leveraging viral moments for marketing, often resulting in a lack of originality and creativity. For brand strategy, this suggests a need to balance timely engagement with authenticity to avoid being perceived as merely riding trends without meaningful contribution.

◎ EmergingcampaignstrategydigitalEmpire State BuildingCurrysCaraway

FastCompany: The Empire State Building is one of (if not the most) iconic symbols of New York City, so it’s unsurprising that many people go to extreme lengths to see it. But a recent pair of visitors have taken it too far. On July 1, a man and a woman wearing all-black masks and clothing climbed to the top of the Empire State Building’s 204-foot spire and quickly went viral for their feat. Holding hands at the pinnacle, the two flew a pro-peace banner for the city to see, and even managed to get engaged and take breathtaking pictures during their expedition.

The duo has since been identified as Angela Nikolau and Ivan Kuznetsov, a couple with a daredevil past notable enough for a Netflix documentary , with the Empire State stunt just the latest in their slate of adventures (and probably a way to promote their film). By the time they made it back down, it wasn’t just law enforcement that was waiting for them—it was social media, too. As soon as close-up images of the couple and the billowing flag dropped on sites like X and Instagram, it all quickly became a meme ripe with potential for thirsty brands trying to ride on their coattails, turning the moment into brand slop.

In real life, the couple’s black banner with white text read: “When the power of love beats the love of power, the world knows peace.” But on social media, the banner became a template for brands looking to tap into the viral moment through their own PSAs. The U.K.-based retailer Currys posted on X an edited image of the couple and their flag, with advice about brewing tea in a kettle instead of a microwave. “The Empire State climbers had an important message,” the new caption said .

The Empire State climbers had an important message 👀 pic.twitter.com/Gq1x11rwFb — Currys (@currys) July 2, 2026 The cookware brand Caraway issued a caution about PFAs . Brands like Petco, Loverboy, and Spritz, among dozens of others, also chimed in. And loyal sports fans expressed their allegiances. “Go birds dickhead,” the flag read in an X post .

2 people climbed the Empire State Building today in New York City just to hang an Eagles banner and yell Go Birds DH 🦅 pic.twitter.com/vjxweChNsQ — Cooper DeJAWN 🦅 (@CooperDeJawn3) July 1, 2026 The meme-to-brand-promotion pipeline is now moving more quickly than ever, and it’s causing mixed reactions. The lack of creativity behind the posts and the uniformity of the core idea illustrates how hungry people are for original campaigns. “I miss when social media marketers had original ideas and didn’t just base their whole strategies on trend slop…” one user on X said . “This is so, so embarrassing,” another user added.

“These brands really think they ~did something~.” This is so, so embarrassing. These brands really think they ~did something~ Loverboy is the worst—congrats, you put your logo on a flag, really innovative stuff The lack of originality & clever thinking in modern social media is just ridiculous https://t.co/o2uFwIlag6 — Jack Appleby (@jappleby) July 2, 2026 But others argued that fun and quick use of social media is indeed a smart marketing route, pushing back on the backlash that bandwagon campaigns like this often get. It’s not original, but it works—for better or worse.

Article truncated for readability. Read the full piece →

Intelligence PanelSignal score: 67.5 / 100
Primary Signal
Emerging
Building momentum — trajectory being tracked
Brand Impact
Medium
Impact score: 70/100 — moderate relevance to positioning decisions
Novelty
Moderate
Novelty: 50/100 — iterative development of an existing theme
Action Priority
Soon
Flag for the next strategic review cycle
Scoring Rationale

The article discusses a notable marketing trend relevant to brand strategy, but the concept of brands leveraging viral moments is not entirely new.

70
Impact
weight 35%
50
Novelty
weight 30%
80
Relevance
weight 35%
Brands Mentioned
EEmpire State BuildingCCurrysCCarawayPPetcoLLoverboySSpritz
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