Weird Brand Collabs That Prove the Marketing Brainstorm Has Officially Entered Its Villain Era: 20 Images

Mar 31, 2026 05:00 AM EDT
Weird brand collabs including Pepsi Peeps, Pop Tarts Crocs, and Doritos spirits bottle
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Listen. I have seen things. I have been in rooms where decisions were made, and I thought I understood how the world operated. And then I found out that someone, somewhere, in an actual building with real lighting and a whiteboard, decided that what the deodorant market was missing was an Arby’s collab. And that person was not fired. That person was celebrated. These 20 weird brand collabs are proof that nobody is in charge and the results are, truly, spectacular. We are going to go through all of them and nobody is leaving until we talk about the Doritos spirits.

Pepsi x Peeps limited edition blue soda can surrounded by marshmallow bunnies
Pop-Tarts x Crocs collaboration featuring strawberry-themed Jibbitz charms on clogs
Old Spice x Arby's Meat Sweat Defense deodorant collab with massive roast beef sandwich
Babybel Goodness Land Candy Land board game collaboration with cheese wheel characters
Balenciaga x Crocs black stiletto heel clog luxury fashion collaboration shoe
Nike SB x Ben and Jerry's Chunky Dunky sneakers packaged in oversized ice cream container
Vlasic limited edition dill pickle scented candle in authentic-looking pickle jar
Hidden Valley Ranch x Crocs cream clogs with nine food-themed Jibbitz charms included
Empirical x Doritos vacuum distilled nacho cheese flavored luxury spirit bottle
Van Leeuwen limited edition Kraft Mac and Cheese French ice cream pint scoops

Weird brand collabs

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Unexpected brand collaborations have quietly become one of the richest veins of content the internet produces, because they sit at the exact intersection of “this cannot be real” and “I need to own this immediately.” The novelty product market has always existed, but something shifted somewhere, and now it is not enough to simply make a good product. The product must also be a moment. It must generate discourse. It must make a person stop their scroll, tilt their head, and type “wait” into a reply box.

Crocs, in particular, has constructed an entire identity around this principle and is clearly unwilling to slow down for any reason whatsoever. The limited edition collaborations they have produced represent a brand that looked at the concept of dignity and decided it was a soft cap, not a hard ceiling. A stiletto heel Croc exists. Balenciaga made it. It costs more than most people’s monthly grocery budget, and it is also somehow correct. The Pop-Tarts Jibbitz are their own spiritual experience, and the Hidden Valley Ranch food charms are the work of a partnership that looked at two completely unrelated brand identities and found their shared frequency, which turns out to be “chaotic snack energy.”

Funny product launches earn their virality through a specific mechanism: they make the viewer feel like they have caught something happening in real time that cannot be explained by conventional logic. The Vlasic pickle candle is a textbook example. A pickle jar. That smells like a pickle. Sold as a candle. The product does exactly what it says. It solves no problem. It creates at least one new problem, which is that your home now smells specifically like a deli aisle. And yet people bought it, and they were right to do so, because the audacity of its existence demanded recognition.

Mac and cheese ice cream. That is a sentence. Van Leeuwen made it a reality, which means someone in a test kitchen tasted it and said yes, this is the direction we are going, and everyone else agreed. The Doritos spirits are operating in a similar register of “what was the meeting like,” because vacuum-distilled nacho cheese flavor as a luxury product requires a pitch that went through multiple rounds of approval. Multiple people read that brief and signed off on it, and none of them stopped it, because the era of stopping things is simply over.

The Babybel and Candy Land collab is the gentlest entry in this gallery and is doing something quite sophisticated, which is using the nostalgia of a childhood board game to reframe cheese as aspirational. That is not an accident. That is strategy. The Nike and Ben and Jerry’s Chunky Dunky packaging, a sneaker inside an ice cream tub, is strategy of a different order, which is “the packaging is the product” energy taken to its natural conclusion.

What all of these collaborations share is an understanding that the product itself is not really the point anymore. The conversation is the point. The screenshot is the point. The “wait, is this real?” moment is the point. Every single one of these brands understood that, leaned into it completely, and produced something that nobody needed and everyone has an opinion about. That, at this point in the timeline, is the highest form of marketing achievement available.

If this gallery has left you vaguely tempted to search for a pickle candle, the world of funny internet finds and viral products is your next destination, documenting every cursed innovation the market has produced with zero apparent guardrails. Funny ads and commercials memes belong right alongside them, covering the campaigns that existed in the same lawless creative space. And for the purest possible dose of “why does this exist,” limited edition food flavors memes are waiting for you with open arms and a nacho cheese martini.

Katie Rodriguez is a seasoned writer with eight years dedicated to meme commentary, viral internet events, and digital storytelling. Formerly a senior meme analyst at Bored Panda and an occasional guest contributor at Vice's Motherboard, Kat specializes in meme culture’s intersection with social media phenomena—covering trends like Milk Crate Challenge, Area 51 Raid, and Baby Yoda. She’s known for her witty writing style and deep understanding of why certain memes resonate across generations, making her a valuable voice on Thunder Dungeon.
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