
Brooklyn Beckham’s World Cup DoorDash campaign lands like a confession disguised as a punchline. After a year of escalating estrangement – skipping David’s 50th, blocking his family, and publicly accusing his parents of manipulation – he now appears to turn that pain into a brandable storyline. In the ad, he casually gives away World Cup tickets, hinting at a “long story” that viewers already know is loaded with family tension.
Online, the reaction mirrors the split inside his own life. Supporters see a son reclaiming his narrative, using humor to survive a deeply dysfunctional dynamic. Critics see a privileged 27‑year‑old trivializing the parents who built the Beckham name he still trades on. Whether the campaign is self-aware or cynical, it underlines a bleak truth: in a celebrity world where every fracture trends, even a family feud can be packaged, sponsored, and served to millions.
