Brooklyn Peltz Beckham Ties World Cup Ad to DoorDash and Family Feud — Brooklyn Beckham World Cup Ad
Brooklyn Peltz Beckham’s brooklyn beckham world cup ad dropped Monday, putting DoorDash into the center of a family story that has already spilled into public view. In the spot, he says, “You’re probably wondering why I’m watching the Fifa World Cup 2026 at home” before tossing several World Cup tickets onto a table.
The ad’s caption, “It’s complicated. More soon.”, keeps the message pointed but incomplete. That choice matters because Beckham is not just appearing in a routine commercial; he is using the same branded-comeback lane he has used before, after a previous collaboration with Uber Eats.
DoorDash Lands Brooklyn Beckham
Brooklyn Peltz Beckham’s new DoorDash ad makes its pitch with one line and one prop move. He delivers the World Cup line, then throws down the tickets, turning the 2026 tournament into the ad’s hook rather than its backdrop.
The branding is doing more work than the script. “It’s complicated. More soon.” reads like a tease, but it also keeps the commercial from feeling like a straightforward food-delivery spot. For DoorDash, that gives the campaign a celebrity face with a built-in story beat instead of a standard endorsement.
Harper Beckham in Los Angeles
Friday brought the friction point behind the campaign. A photographer captured 14-year-old Harper Beckham outside the LA house owned by Brooklyn and Nicola Peltz as she tried to hand-deliver him a letter, while Brooklyn was in New York. The timing turned a family moment into a public scene and left his commercial appearance carrying extra context.
Brooklyn and Nicola Peltz’s representatives said, “That photographers were in place as the letter was hand delivered says it all – this was choreographed for the cameras.” A source for the Beckham family pushed back harder, saying, “[It] is incredibly sad that this horrible accusation is being levelled at an innocent young girl who just desperately misses her brother.”
Last week added another layer when David Beckham was given a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in Los Angeles, with the Beckham family in the city for the ceremony. That means this DoorDash spot arrives while the family’s public image is already being read through two lenses at once: a high-profile brand moment and a private dispute playing out in public.
Beckham Brand, New Pitch
Brooklyn Beckham previously attacked the family brand’s love of self-promotion, which makes the DoorDash ad more pointed than a normal celebrity tie-up. He has already done a collaboration with Uber Eats, so this is less a one-off and more evidence that he is still comfortable working commercial jobs even when the family narrative around him is messy.
For viewers, the practical takeaway is simple: the new campaign is out now, and it is not trying to hide its subtext. DoorDash gets a headline-making face, Brooklyn gets another branded appearance, and the “More soon” tag signals that the company is not done stretching this story for attention.