CONCEPT 01
The Chantix Series
"Ask your barista if MUD\WTR is right for you."
Fix Your Fix
Recurring Series
Sneak Peek Candidate
A series of pharmaceutical ad parodies — one for each Target SKU. Shot in the style of a real Chantix/Jardiance/Ozempic commercial: soft-focus lifestyle footage, gentle piano music, a warm narrator reading side effects. Except the "condition" is reckless caffeination, the "treatment" is MUD\WTR Coffee (or Mocha, Vanilla Chai, Strawberry Matcha), and the side effects are absurdly positive ("may cause finishing thoughts," "has been linked to not yelling at your inbox").
The twist: each person "taking" their MUD\WTR starts becoming wildly creative — dancing, DJing, spray-painting murals, writing poetry, starting companies. The creativity escalates while the narrator stays completely deadpan, reading it like clinical trial results. Ends with the FYF end card and "Available at Target. Ask your barista if MUD\WTR is right for you."
Format
4-6 videos (one per SKU + hero cut). 30-60 sec each. Vertical + horizontal.
Channels
IG Reels, TikTok, Meta Ads, YouTube Shorts, Roundel (cut-downs)
Calendar Fit
Hero cut at launch (May 10). Roll out SKU-specific versions weekly through June. Repurpose as paid through Sept.
Production
Medium-High. 1-2 day shoot. Cast 4-6 "patients." VO recording. Post-production for pharma-style graphics.
Weekly Engine?
Yes — each SKU is its own episode. Can extend with "clinical trial updates," "patient testimonials," new side effects.
Target Repost?
Moderate. Edgy for Target's brand but the entertainment value is high. Best as a MUD\WTR-owned piece that Target comments on.
Creative POV: This is the strongest FYF concept for Target. It's inherently a series (one per SKU = 4-6 episodes minimum), it's deeply on-brand, and the pharma format is universally recognizable — everyone's seen these commercials. The creative escalation from "patient takes medicine" to "patient is now DJing in a Target aisle" is the kind of thing people screenshot and send to friends. This should be in the sneak peek package. Storyboard 2 versions: Coffee (hero) and Strawberry Matcha (visual pop).
CONCEPT 02
Mushrooms for Everybody
"I take mushrooms at work. I take mushrooms when I clean the house."
Fix Your Fix
Recurring Series
Sneak Peek Candidate
A mockumentary-style series where real-looking people casually describe when they "take mushrooms" — cleaning the house, making breakfast, at work, making art, before a date, at their kid's soccer game. The language is intentionally ambiguous, evoking psychedelics while the visuals are totally domestic and wholesome. The reveal: they're talking about MUD\WTR's functional mushroom blends, and they just picked them up at Target.
Each episode features a different person and a different blend. The tone is confessional — handheld camera, natural lighting, people speaking directly into the lens like they're sharing a secret. Ends with "Mushrooms for everybody. Now at Target." and the FYF end card.
Format
5-10 short videos. 15-30 sec each. Can also be cut as one compilation (60 sec).
Channels
TikTok (native feel), IG Reels, Meta Ads (the compilation cut), organic + paid
Calendar Fit
Drip one per week starting May 17 (after launch). Compilation cut for promo week (May 24). Fresh episodes through July.
Production
Low-Medium. Half-day shoot with 5-8 people. Minimal set — just people in their environments. Can use real customers or cast.
Weekly Engine?
Yes — infinitely extensible. New person + new scenario = new episode. Can recruit real customers via Hummingbirds to make their own versions.
Target Repost?
High potential. The double-entendre is PG enough for Target. It's funny, shareable, and the "now at Target" tag is organic.
Creative POV: This is the concept with the highest viral ceiling. The double-entendre is doing all the work — it's the kind of thing where the hook alone ("I take mushrooms before every meeting") stops the scroll. It's also the most producible at scale: you can shoot 10 of these in a day, or have Hummingbirds creators make their own versions with a simple brief. The compilation cut becomes a hero ad. I'd storyboard this for the sneak peek — it's the easiest concept for Target's broker to immediately "get."
CONCEPT 03
FYF Options
"For people who like to keep their options open."
Fix Your Fix
Recurring Series
A scripted comedy series about chronically non-committal people. Each episode features someone who can't commit to anything — they've got three dating apps open, they won't pick a restaurant, they "keep their options open" on everything. The scenes are funny, relatable slice-of-life moments. The twist: MUD\WTR gets it. That's why they made six flavors. For people who like options. Now at Target.
The FYF angle: frame it as a PSA for "commitment-phobic caffeination." "If you or someone you know can't settle on just one morning drink... there's help. MUD\WTR now offers 6 options at your local Target."
Format
3-5 scripted comedy sketches. 30-45 sec each. Character-driven.
Channels
IG Reels, TikTok, organic social. Could adapt for Meta ads with product carousel.
Calendar Fit
Mid-campaign (June-July) when "we have 6 flavors at Target" is the message. Keeps lineup awareness going after launch hype fades.
Production
Medium. Need good comedic actors. 1-day shoot. Script-dependent — writing quality makes or breaks this.
Weekly Engine?
Moderate. Needs fresh scripts each time. Works as a 3-5 episode mini-series rather than an infinite format.
Target Repost?
Low-Moderate. Entertaining but more brand-specific. Better as owned content.
Creative POV: Good concept but it's the most script-dependent idea in the batch — it lives or dies on the writing and the actors. I'd hold this as a Phase 3 play (June-July) when you need to reinforce the "6 flavors at Target" message. It's not a sneak peek candidate because it needs polished scripts to land, not storyboards. Could also work as a brief for comedy creators (Tier 2 influencers) rather than an in-house production.
CONCEPT 04
Jacob Jonas x Target
Elite contemporary dance meets the Target aisle.
Creative Rebel
Recurring Series
Sneak Peek Candidate
A recurring content series in partnership with Jacob Jonas The Company (248K IG, worked with Kanye, Rosalia, SZA, Gucci, Apple). Dancers perform 30-second contemporary/hip-hop pieces through Target aisles, grabbing MUD\WTR products as part of the choreography. The movement is athletic, mesmerizing, interpretive — think Kanye's "Runaway" ballet, not a flash mob.
Each installment features a different dancer and a different product. Wardrobe is product-color-coded: pink-to-green gradient for Strawberry Matcha, warm brown tones for Coffee, golden for Vanilla Chai. Dancers are tattooed, interesting-looking, cool — not stock-photo wellness people. Music is bold and minimal: hip-hop beats, sparse piano, silence with footsteps. VO explains the product over the dance. Ends with "MUD\WTR. Now at Target."
Format
4-8 videos. 30-45 sec. One per product + "full company" hero piece. Vertical for social, horizontal hero cut for paid.
Channels
IG Reels (primary), TikTok, YouTube Shorts. The hero cut works for Roundel and Meta paid.
Calendar Fit
Launch with hero cut (May 10). Weekly SKU-specific drops through June. Monthly through Sept for sustained push.
Production
Medium-High. Requires Target store access (after hours or cooperative location). 1-2 day shoot with JJTC. Choreography lead time.
Weekly Engine?
Yes — new dancer, new product, new choreography. Can batch-shoot 4-6 in one session.
Target Repost?
Very high. This makes their stores look aspirational. It's entertainment-first with Target as the beautiful backdrop. Exactly what their social team wants.
Creator Intel
Jacob Jonas The Company — 248K IG followers. Worked with Kanye, Rosalia, SZA, Sia, Elton John. Brand work for Gucci, Gap, Apple, Mastercard. Films.Dance platform (10M+ views). Jacob is a stage IV cancer survivor — health/wellness angle is authentic. He reportedly already loves MUD\WTR and wants to collaborate.
Creative POV: This is the concept that could define MUD\WTR's visual identity at Target for the entire window. The production value is high enough for a sneak peek storyboard that would genuinely impress Target's team — "this is what your stores will look like in our content." The fact that Jacob already wants to work with you de-risks the partnership. Key question: can you get Target store access for filming? If yes, this is a top-2 concept. If not, it still works in a Target-inspired set, but loses the magic of the real aisles. I'd storyboard this for the broker package — even if you end up not doing it, the ambition signals to Target that MUD\WTR plays at a different level than Ryze.
CONCEPT 05
The Artists Series
10 creators. 10 disciplines. 1 launch.
Creative Rebel
Recurring Series
Commission 10 artists across different disciplines — collage artists, potters, musicians, dancers, spoken word poets, illustrators, muralists — to each create a piece of content celebrating the Target launch through their medium. A potter throws a custom MUD\WTR mug and drinks from it. A collage artist makes a piece from Target receipts and MUD\WTR packaging. A spoken word poet performs a piece about morning ritual. A musician scores a 30-second spot.
Each artist is a real creator with an existing IG/TikTok following. They post to their own channels (reach) and you repost to MUD\WTR (content library). The unifying thread: MUD\WTR fuels the creative mind, and now it's at Target.
Format
10 pieces of content. Mixed formats: video (15-60 sec), carousel, static. Each artist's natural medium.
Channels
Artists' own channels + MUD\WTR reposts. IG, TikTok. Best pieces become paid assets.
Calendar Fit
Roll out 1-2 per week starting May 17. Run through July. Keeps content diverse and fresh without internal production burden.
Production
Low (for you). Each artist produces their own content. You provide product, brief, and payment. Main cost is talent fees.
Weekly Engine?
Yes — but finite. 10 artists = 10 weeks of content. Can extend by commissioning more artists in Phase 3.
Target Repost?
Moderate-High. Depends on the individual piece. The potter making a mug? Very repostable. Abstract collage? Less so.
Est. Budget
$500-$2,000 per artist depending on following and production. $5K-$20K total for 10 artists. Could pull from the $50K influencer budget.
Creative POV: This is the most scalable concept in the Creative Rebel lane. It's essentially a curated influencer program but positioned as an art project — which is much more interesting and much more MUD\WTR. The key is curation: the 10 artists need to feel like a collective, not random influencer posts. I'd suggest a unifying hashtag (#MadeWithMUD or #MUDWTRMakers) and a consistent end card. The pottery/mug idea specifically is gold — visual, tactile, and the finished product (a handmade MUD\WTR mug) is something people will want. Could even do a limited giveaway of the finished art pieces.
CONCEPT 06
OPTIONS (Hippy Sabotage)
"MUD\WTR has options." Set to a licensed track.
Creative Rebel
Tentpole
License Hippy Sabotage's "Options" (64M Spotify plays) as the sonic backbone for a music-video-style campaign. Dancers and creatives flow through a Target store — contemporary movement, bold outfits, minimal aesthetic. One hero video features the full lineup. Individual cuts spotlight each product. They grab it off the shelf, make it, do something visually wild, all to the track. Ends with "MUD\WTR has options. Now at Target."
The vibe is artistic, contemporary, minimal. Less flash mob, more editorial fashion film that happens to be set in Target.
Format
1 hero video (60-90 sec) + 4 SKU-specific cuts (15-30 sec). Music-driven. Cinematic vertical + horizontal.
Channels
IG Reels, TikTok (sound is key), YouTube, Meta paid. The track's existing audience adds organic discovery.
Calendar Fit
Launch week tentpole (May 10-16) or promo week hero (May 24). The SKU cuts feed weekly content through June.
Production
High. Music licensing ($10-15K est.), choreography, in-store filming, strong post-production. This is a "shoot" not a "capture."
Weekly Engine?
Limited. This is a tentpole, not a series. The SKU cuts extend it for a few weeks, but it's fundamentally a big swing.
Target Repost?
Very high. This is the most visually premium concept. Target's stores look like a gallery. Their social team would love this.
Music Intel
Hippy Sabotage — "Options": 64M Spotify plays. The track is actually quite somber/introspective (145 BPM, soulful). Not a high-energy banger — more contemplative. Could work for a moody, editorial feel, but verify the vibe matches the energy you want. Their bigger track "Devil Eyes" (700M streams) might be a better fit if you want more intensity. Licensing est: $10-15K for 6-month social use.
Creative POV: Beautiful concept but a few flags. First, "Options" the track is moodier than you might expect — listen to it before committing. The concept itself (dancers in Target to a licensed track) overlaps heavily with the Jacob Jonas concept. If you do both, they'll compete. My recommendation: pick one. If Jacob Jonas is available and willing, go that route — it's a relationship, it's repeatable, and it's cheaper than a music license. If you want the licensed music route, consider "Devil Eyes" (bigger track, more energy) or even commissioning an original track from an emerging artist (cheaper, you own it, and it becomes your sonic identity for the campaign). The "MUD\WTR has options" tagline is strong regardless of whether you use this specific song.
CONCEPT 07
The Transformation
Uncle Drew meets Target. Old people doing insane things.
Creative Rebel
Tentpole
Dancers in full old-age prosthetics shuffle into Target looking like grandparents. They pick up MUD\WTR. They take a sip. Suddenly, the 60-year-old grandma is hitting a full contemporary dance routine in the aisle. The 70-year-old grandpa is breakdancing by the checkout. The transformation is the gag — MUD\WTR activates the creative rebel in everyone, regardless of age.
Inspired by the Kyrie Irving "Uncle Drew" Pepsi campaign, but repositioned for creatives instead of athletes. The "sport" is making things — dancing, painting, performing. Spoken word VO or no dialogue at all — just the visual transformation and bold music. The prosthetics need to be good enough that the reveal genuinely surprises.
Format
1-3 videos. 30-60 sec. The "reveal" moment is the viral mechanic. Could have a hero cut + behind-the-scenes.
Channels
TikTok (transformation content thrives here), IG Reels, YouTube Shorts. Strong paid potential.
Calendar Fit
Mid-campaign tentpole (June-July). Gives the content calendar a second spike after launch hype settles.
Production
High. Prosthetics/makeup (half-day application), dancers, in-store access, choreography. This is a full production day.
Weekly Engine?
No. This is a one-shot tentpole. BTS content and reaction cuts can extend to 2-3 posts.
Target Repost?
Very high. This is pure entertainment. The "hidden camera" energy of a transformation reveal is exactly what Target's audience loves.
Creative POV: Highest viral ceiling of any single piece in this brief. Transformation/reveal content consistently outperforms on TikTok and Reels — the format is proven. The risk is execution: bad prosthetics make it campy instead of surprising, and you need genuinely elite dancers to make the reveal land. If you're already working with Jacob Jonas, this becomes a natural collaboration — their dancers in old-age makeup. I'd position this as the Phase 3 tentpole (June-July) that reignites the campaign when the launch buzz has faded. Don't blow this at launch — save it for when you need a second spike.
CONCEPT 08
Here to Support Your Morning Ritual
Target run becomes a ritual. The store becomes a portal.
Creative Rebel
Tentpole
A cinematic short film. Someone walks into Target. Spoken word builds over atmospheric music. They move through the aisles with intention — grabbing a yoga mat, a meditation pillow, a mug, a water heater, milk, honey, a speaker, and MUD\WTR. Each item is shot beautifully, slowly, like a ritual in itself. They walk out of Target and into nature — a forest, a field, a coastline.
Cut to: they move. Yoga, breathwork, dance. People appear — it becomes community. Everyone's holding warm mugs. The morning ritual is bigger than a drink — it's a practice, a gathering, a way of living. Ends with: "MUD\WTR. Here to support your morning ritual, whatever that might be."
Format
1 hero film (60-90 sec). Can cut down to 30-sec and 15-sec versions. Horizontal + vertical.
Channels
IG Reels, YouTube, Roundel (cut-downs). This is brand-building content, not direct response.
Calendar Fit
Launch week hero (May 10) or brand film that runs as a slow-burn throughout the campaign.
Production
High. Two locations (Target + outdoor), cast, spoken word artist, cinematographer, full production day.
Weekly Engine?
No. This is a single hero asset. Could spawn a "What's your morning ritual?" UGC prompt for weekly follow-ups.
Target Repost?
Moderate. Beautiful but long-form brand content is harder for Target to repost than snackable entertainment.
Creative POV: This is the most emotionally resonant concept — it captures what MUD\WTR actually stands for at its deepest level. The risk: it's expensive to produce, it's a single asset, and it doesn't feed the weekly engine. I'd consider this a "nice to have" rather than a "must do" for this campaign. If budget allows, it's a beautiful brand film. If budget is tight, the same emotional territory can be captured through the Artists Series (a spoken word poet + a yoga instructor + a community gathering = similar feeling, lower cost, more content pieces). The tagline "Here to support your morning ritual, whatever that might be" is excellent regardless — use it across the campaign even if this specific film doesn't get made.
CONCEPT 09
Mindfulness in Aisle 7
A wellness guru blesses the Target aisle. It's absurd. It's beautiful.
Creative Rebel
FYF Crossover
Shoppers are browsing the new MUD\WTR blends at Target, trying to decide which one to try. Suddenly, a figure appears — a known breathwork instructor, yoga teacher, or mindfulness thought leader (or Shane himself). Instead of a normal product demo or sampling, they turn the aisle into a guided experience: a sound bath between the shelves, a breathing exercise by the checkout, a meditation circle in the food court.
It's a collision of spiritual wellness stereotypes with the mundane reality of a Target run. It plays with the expectation of "in-store sampling" by replacing the sample cup with a full-on guided journey. Could be played straight (genuinely beautiful and calming) or with FYF energy (played completely earnest but the absurdity of doing breathwork in Target IS the joke).
Format
1-3 videos. 30-60 sec. Could be a recurring "Aisle 7 Sessions" series with different practitioners.
Channels
IG Reels, TikTok (the absurdity plays well here). Potential for a real in-store activation at launch.
Calendar Fit
Launch week activation (May 10-16) or promo week (May 24). Works as a one-off or a recurring series.
Production
Medium. Requires in-store access + a wellness practitioner. Can be shot guerrilla-style (handheld, real reactions) or produced.
Weekly Engine?
Possible. "Aisle 7 Sessions" with a different practitioner each time — breathwork one week, sound bath next, cold plunge in parking lot, etc.
Target Repost?
High if executed well. Target loves in-store content that makes the experience feel special.
Creative POV: This is an interesting hybrid — it sits between FYF (the absurdity of doing a sound bath in Target is inherently PSA-adjacent) and Creative Rebel (the wellness practitioners are real, the experience is genuine). I'd lean into the FYF angle: play it completely straight, like it's a real "MUD\WTR Mindfulness Initiative" at Target. The earnest institutional tone makes it funnier. "As part of our ongoing initiative to support the mental wellness of Target shoppers, MUD\WTR is proud to announce complimentary breathwork sessions in aisle 7." If Shane does this personally with a known practitioner, it has founder-energy AND entertainment value. Worth developing further but needs a tighter angle — right now it's somewhere between a real activation, a comedy sketch, and a brand film. Pick one.
CONCEPT 11
Win Dirt: The Creative Retreat Giveaway
"Show us your Target receipt. Win actual land."
Promotional
Campaign-Long
MUD\WTR buys a multi-acre piece of land — somewhere beautiful, rugged, undeveloped. The giveaway: purchase MUD\WTR at Target, show your receipt, get one entry to win the land as your personal creative retreat. The brand alignment is layered — you're literally giving away earth, dirt, mud. It's for camping, creating, disconnecting. The prize isn't a gift card or a product bundle. It's real land.
The campaign angle: "We're called MUD. We sell dirt. And now we're giving some away." Receipt verification drives Target purchases. The land itself becomes content — document the search for the perfect property, the announcement, the winner's first visit. It's a 6-month narrative arc that ties the whole campaign together.
Format
Campaign-long promotional mechanic + content series. Announcement post, weekly updates, winner reveal.
Channels
All channels. The giveaway CTA lives on every Target-related post. Landing page at mudwtr.com/target for entry.
Calendar Fit
Announce at launch (May 10). Entries open through August. Winner announced in September close. The full exclusive window becomes the contest window.
Production
Low (content). High (logistics). Need legal review for sweepstakes rules, land purchase, entry system. Content production is minimal — it's documentation.
Weekly Engine?
Yes — in a different way. Every Target post includes the giveaway CTA. Weekly entry count updates. "Still searching for the perfect property" updates. The giveaway IS the recurring thread.
Target Repost?
High. "Brand gives away actual land" is a headline. Target benefits from the traffic driver.
Est. Budget
$50K for land (as noted). Legal/sweepstakes setup: $5-10K. This is a significant investment but the PR value and receipt-driven purchases could justify it.
Creative POV: This is the most ambitious idea in the brief and the one that could generate earned media beyond social. "Mushroom coffee company gives away land to Target shoppers" is a press story. The brand alignment is perfect — mud, earth, dirt, ground(ed). The receipt mechanic directly drives Target purchases, which is the entire point. The risk: $50K for land is real money, legal complexity for sweepstakes is non-trivial, and you need to find the right property. But as a campaign through-line that ties the entire 6-month window together? Nothing else in this brief has this kind of narrative arc. I'd suggest exploring this seriously as the "big swing" that sits on top of whichever creative lane you choose. Every other concept can include "...and enter to win land" as the CTA. The question is whether the $50K land investment competes with or complements the existing $50K influencer budget. If it's additive budget, do it. If it cannibalizes influencer spend, the math gets harder.