
A stumble, a web, and a World Cup: Messi’s cameo swings into Spider-Man’s universe
A promotional spot released during the 2026 tournament shows the footballer, speaking only Spanish, being swept through Manhattan by Tom Holland’s superhero, merging two of the planet’s most recognisable brands.
The moment that would ricochet across social media began with a pratfall. In a New York delicatessen, Tom Holland’s Peter Parker is mid-conversation on his phone when the door opens and Lionel Messi walks in. The actor, visibly starstruck, stumbles and drops to the floor at the footballer’s feet, a slapstick collapse that sets the tone for a 40-second promotional clip released by Sony Pictures on 30 June. Messi, holding his own phone, is using a “Spidey Tracker” app to locate the superhero. Parker excuses himself, returns in the red-and-blue suit, and with a question about a fear of heights, launches the pair on a web-swinging tour of Manhattan. The Argentine speaks only Spanish; Holland stays in English. The language gap becomes part of the gag.
The spot is the latest salvo in the marketing campaign for “Spider-Man: Brand New Day”, the fourth Holland-led instalment in the Marvel franchise, directed by Destin Daniel Cretton and scheduled for release across the Americas at the end of July. It arrives as Messi is competing at the 2026 World Cup, where he has just become the tournament’s all-time leading scorer. The dual presence—on the pitch in Miami and inside a Hollywood blockbuster’s promotional universe—is a deliberate collision of audiences. Marketing analysts note that the World Cup is generating an estimated $10.5 billion in incremental global ad spend in the second quarter alone, and the crossover taps directly into the overlapping fanbases of international football and superhero cinema. Messi’s previous high-budget advertising work, including the Adidas short film “Backyard Legends” with Timothée Chalamet, had already positioned him as a pop-culture figure; this cameo pushes him inside a fictional narrative, blurring the line between celebrity and character.
Reactions to the video fractured along regional lines but converged on a shared sense of amused surprise. In Latin America, the cameo was read as another layer of Messi’s mythic status, with Argentine outlets emphasising his refusal to speak English as a mark of authenticity. Brazilian commentators joked that the World Cup’s top scorer was completing “side quests”. In India, social media users quipped that “Messi will definitely return in Avengers: Doomsday”, while European observers framed the meeting as a natural convergence of two global entertainment brands. The humour of the spot—Messi’s deadpan “sí” and his terrified scream as he is yanked into the sky—became instant meme material. Some reports, unconfirmed, claimed the footballer was paid $15 million for the brief appearance.
The final image of the clip is a long shot of two figures suspended between skyscrapers, one a fictional hero in spandex, the other a real-life icon whose silhouette is recognised on every continent. Messi’s scream echoes as the web snaps them forward, a sound that, for a few seconds, unites the stadium roar and the multiplex. As the World Cup knockout rounds begin and the film’s release nears, that image lingers: a man who has spent his career defying gravity, now literally hanging from a thread.
| Latin American press | +0.60 | aligned |
|---|---|---|
| Russian & CIS press | −0.40 | critical |
| Arab Levant-Maghreb press | 0.00 | neutral |
| Continental European press | +0.30 | aligned |
Latin American talent conquers the world: Messi once again proves his greatness.
It emphasizes regional pride and emotional connection with the audience, turning a cameo into a symbol of collective success.
Priorities lie elsewhere: national security and stability matter, not celebrities.
It establishes an implicit hierarchy between serious and frivolous news, relegating the cameo to a lower rank.
Real issues lie elsewhere: the region has far more urgent problems than a cameo.
It actively selects what deserves attention, excluding news deemed futile based on a calculation of political relevance.
Just another cameo: Messi joins the summer carousel of global entertainment.
It normalizes the event by placing it within a framework of global entertainment, downplaying any exceptionality.
Broaden your view
Millions fill Tehran for Khamenei funeral as successor remains unseen
5 languages · 13 outlets
From Economy & MarketsEV Sales Surge in Latin America and Asia as Chinese Brands and Tesla Redraw Auto Rivalries
4 languages · 7 outlets
From TechnologyOpenAI clears US security review, sets Thursday launch for GPT-5.6 model family
7 languages · 20 outlets