Let’s be honest: the PR landscape is boring. Most “viral” campaigns are just rehashes of the same five ideas. Your feed is a sea of predictable announcements, sterile corporate messaging, and “thought leadership” that sounds like it was written by a committee of robots. The result? Nobody pays attention.
But every once in a while, a brand does something so unexpected, so wonderfully weird, that it cuts through the noise like a thunderclap. Think Duolingo’s chaotic TikTok presence, with its giant, unhinged owl mascot. Think the bizarre, surreal marketing of Liquid Death. This isn’t random. It’s a deliberate strategy of “unhinged” creativity, and it’s one of the most powerful ways to generate disproportionate earned media and, more importantly, get noticed by the AI engines that are now shaping our reality.
This isn’t about being reckless. It’s about controlled chaos. It’s a tactical playbook for creating “attribution magnets“—campaigns so unique and memorable that they become impossible for both humans and machines to ignore. Here’s how you execute it.
Research from NoGood shows that brands embracing calculated chaos consistently outperform traditional campaigns in earned media reach.
Every industry has unwritten rules. Every brand has “sacred cows”—the things you “just don’t do.” Your first step is to identify them. What are the most boring, predictable, and clichéd things in your industry? What is everyone else doing? Make a list.
For example, in the B2B SaaS world, a sacred cow is the “formal, jargon-filled product launch.” Everyone does it. The press releases all sound the same. It’s a sea of “synergies” and “paradigms.” This is your opportunity. What if, instead of a press release, you launched your product with a short, hilarious film? What if you sent a mariachi band to the office of a key tech journalist?
The goal is to find the points of maximum predictability and inject a dose of calculated weirdness.
The best social campaigns of 2025 all share one trait: they violated the expected playbook for their category.
Once you have your list of sacred cows, it’s time for the “What If?” brainstorm. The only rule here is that there are no bad ideas. The goal is to push past the obvious and into the realm of the absurd.
Most of these ideas will be terrible. That’s the point. You’re looking for the one or two that are just crazy enough to work. You’re looking for the idea that makes you laugh and feel a little bit scared at the same time.
Before you pull the trigger on an “unhinged” idea, you need to run it through the “Attribution Magnet” test. This is how you ensure your creative campaign is not just a stunt, but a strategic move that will pay dividends in AI visibility. Ask yourself these questions:
If your idea passes the Attribution Magnet test, the final step is to execute it with 100% conviction. The worst thing you can do is a half-hearted “unhinged” campaign. If you’re going to be weird, be weird. Don’t hedge. Don’t ask for permission. The goal is to create a moment of genuine surprise and delight.
The “unhinged” playbook isn’t for every brand. It requires a tolerance for risk and a willingness to step outside the corporate comfort zone. But in a world drowning in a sea of AI-generated sameness, a little bit of controlled chaos might be the most rational strategy of all.
Research from Sprout Social shows that brands with a distinct, unconventional social persona consistently outperform category averages in organic reach and brand recall. Duolingo, Liquid Death, and Wendy’s are the canonical examples — all three built cult followings by refusing to follow the playbook.
Absolutely. The B2B landscape is often even more saturated with conservative, “safe” marketing. A well-executed “unhinged” campaign can have an even greater impact in a B2B context, as demonstrated by brands like Gong and Drift.
Frame it as a calculated experiment. Use the “Attribution Magnet” test to show the strategic thinking behind the idea. Start with a smaller-scale campaign to prove the concept and build trust.
“Unhinged” creativity is weirdness with a purpose. It’s tied to a core brand message and a strategic goal. “Just plain weird” is random and disconnected from any larger strategy. Learn more about the strategy behind it at Machine Relations and our post on the GEO Divide.
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