Volkswagen marks 50 years of the GTI with fan-led anniversary film
UK – Volkswagen has launched a campaign celebrating the 50th anniversary of its GTI model, using fan stories to trace the hot hatch’s place in British culture over five decades.
Created by Bernbach, the 60-second film called 50 Years of Pure Passion follows the GTI from the 1976 Mk1 to the new Golf GTI Edition 50. It blends user-generated content with scenes inspired by home movies, camcorder footage and social media – appealing to nostalgia as a key driver of consumer behaviour.
The campaign demonstrates how heritage products can remain culturally relevant by placing community and nostalgia at the centre of storytelling, rather than focusing solely on product features. By celebrating real owners and evolving visual formats, Volkswagen reinforces long-term brand loyalty while introducing the GTI to a new generation, with a nod to the future through the ID Polo GTI model.
This aligns with insights from our Heritage Brand-umentaries and Cinema-coded Advertising reports, which explore how brands are using cinematic storytelling to reinterpret brand identity through everyday memories and lived experience.
Strategic opportunity
Build campaigns around real customer memories and rituals instead of brand messaging to create more credible, emotionally resonant narratives
The Hot Pot Table: How Arc’teryx, Salomon and Lululemon became status symbols in China
The Hot Pot Table is the monthly deep dive for global executives and brand managers who need to move past the headlines and into the operational reality of the world’s most dynamic consumer markets in Asia.
China – A new cultural shorthand has emerged among China’s middle class: the zhong chan san bao, or ‘three treasures’ – Arc’teryx, Salomon and Lululemon. These performance and outdoor brands have become the new markers of aspiration, replacing traditional luxury signifiers such as handbags and high-end fashion.
The great outdoors
The rise in popularity of these brands is down to a boom in outdoor activities, says Fan Tu-Cerny on The Hot Pot Table podcast: ‘People have the urge to reconnect with nature and just compensate themselves for being stuck indoors for that long.’
New luxury
The shift is less about functionality and more about what the podcast describes as a ‘posture of being hardcore’. ‘They want to appear like they can go to work in this outfit, but if they want to, they can just run straight into the mountains,’ says Fan. Crucially, this isn't replacing traditional luxury – the same consumer carrying a Chanel bag Monday to Friday is wearing Arc’teryx at the weekend. Arc’teryx, positioned as the ‘Hermès of outdoor’ following its acquisition by Anta, has simply added a new layer to how China’s middle class signals status.
Who’s next
Alo Yoga and Vuori are two players moving in on the three treasures. The former is aggressively aesthetic and influencer-led; the latter comfort-driven and quietly expanding. Two distinct strategies, yet both are setting themselves up for sucess by being ‘explicitly clear about what they stand for,’ says Hot Pot CEO Jonathan Travers-Smith.
Strategic opportunity
Luxury brands in China should consider how outdoor activities and community-led activations could extend their cultural relevance beyond the boutique by meeting the middle-class consumer in the spaces and pursuits they now use to signal identity at the weekend
Stat: Why personalised prevention could turn dementia awareness into action
Global – A Curtin University-led review has found that up to 45% of dementia cases are linked to modifiable lifestyle, health and environmental factors, but public campaigns are failing to translate awareness into sustained action.
The research involved 500,000 adults in eight countries for more than a decade and assessed 12 population-level interventions. Eight of the 11 studies measuring knowledge recorded improvements, yet large-scale campaigns generally produced limited behavioural change.
Interactive and personalised approaches performed better. In Tasmania, online education combined with an individual dementia risk profile contributed to a 26% improvement in modifiable risk-factor status over 36 months.
In Wuhan, China, trained community leaders helped increase participation in free screening, from 23.9% to 46.0%, while improving knowledge and reducing stigma.
The findings suggest health organisations must move beyond generic messaging towards culturally relevant, practical tools delivered through trusted community networks.
We've been tracking Longevity Lifestyles since 2023, highlighting how preventative healthcare is empowering individuals to lead longer healthier lives, as the movement shifts from esoteric wellness behaviours to mainstream healthcare interventions.
Strategic opportunity
How can your brand translate longevity messaging into personalised tools, culturally relevant guidance and achievable interventions that help people identify their risks, overcome barriers and sustain healthier behaviours in the long term?