David Beckham Family Ad Puts Brooklyn Peltz Beckham Back in View
Brooklyn Peltz Beckham put david beckham back into the frame on Monday with a new DoorDash ad that centers on watching the Fifa World Cup 2026 at home. In the spot, he says, "You’re probably wondering why I’m watching the Fifa World Cup 2026 at home" before adding, "It’s a long story."
Monday’s DoorDash Spot
The ad gives DoorDash a timely celebrity placement and gives Beckham another public use of his name after a previous collaboration with Uber Eats. He throws several World Cup tickets onto a table, where letters are also visible, and the caption lands the joke with, "It’s complicated. More soon."
That language is doing more than selling food delivery. It turns a routine brand ad into another public signal that Beckham’s family story is still being narrated through controlled appearances, even after he said he wanted privacy after stepping away from Beckham family duties.
Harper’s Letter Outside Los Angeles
Last Friday, a photographer captured Harper, Beckham’s 14-year-old sister, outside the Los Angeles house owned by Brooklyn and Nicola Peltz as she tried to hand-deliver a letter. Brooklyn was in New York at the time, and representatives for Brooklyn and Nicola Peltz said, "That photographers were in place as the letter was hand delivered says it all – this was choreographed for the cameras."
A Beckham family source pushed back with, "[It] is incredibly sad that this horrible accusation is being levelled at an innocent young girl who just desperately misses her brother." The exchange keeps the dispute in the open and places the new ad in the middle of a family image battle, not above it.
Hollywood Walk of Fame Week
Last week, David Beckham received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in Los Angeles, with all the flown-in children except Brooklyn attending. That ceremony showed the family’s public face remains active even as the private rupture stays unresolved, and the ad extends that split into a branded setting instead of a family event.
For readers tracking the Beckham brand rather than the gossip, the takeaway is straightforward: Brooklyn is still a public-facing asset in a family whose image remains split between promotional control and visible distance. The DoorDash campaign keeps him marketable, but it also makes the privacy message harder to separate from the publicity machine around him.