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No More Trending: Elon Musk Bans Hashtags in X Ads, Signaling Shift Toward Cleaner Creatives and Smarter Content Targeting

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No More Trending: Elon Musk Bans Hashtags in X Ads, Signaling Shift Toward Cleaner Creatives and Smarter Content Targeting

To rank higher on search engines, creators tend to flood their content with unnecessary keywords. It works for a while, but it also ruins the reading experience. The same trend spilled into social media. Advertisers began stuffing their ads with “relevant” hashtags. Sure, they serve by boosting discoverability, categorizing content, tracking performance, and reinforcing campaign messaging. But they often butchered the visual appeal of ad creatives.

On June 27, Elon Musk, owner of X (formerly Twitter), put an end to that mess. In a post, he announced: “Starting tomorrow, the esthetic nightmare that is hashtags will be banned from ads on 𝕏.” That’s right. Hashtags are now officially prohibited on paid advertisements on X. This provision, however, is only applicable to advertisements. Normal users may continue to use them, as before.

This is not merely a visual clean-up, but a shift in strategy on the platform. What X appears to desire are better-looking ads that feel native and work because of content, not tags. To brands, it acts as a wake-up call to reconsider their engagement strategies. Trending tags are out of time; now, smart storytelling is the thing. Historically, hashtags were the hook, bridge to trending topics, way to get discovered by the curious and the engaged. Now, with that bridge gone, ads on X must rely entirely on algorithmic targeting. Which means, reduced organic reach unless the targeting is razor-sharp.

So, what’s next for advertisers? The path is precision, creativity, and persuasion. Advertising copy now needs the heavy lifting with headlines that catch attention, body text that punches, and visuals that make people scroll. When your message fails to resonate within the initial seconds, it is gone. Also, with no hashtags to spark action, calls to action must step up. Whether it’s a bold question, a smart landing page, or clever interactive hooks, engagement can’t be left to chance anymore.

Dropping hashtags may appear to be a restriction, yet, at the same time, this compels superior advertisements. It gives marketers the challenge to produce content that works, not because it is popular, but rather what makes it work. Ultimately, such a shift may make the ad tools of X more essential. In the absence of free reach through hashtags, brands might have few other options available other than to invest more heavily in the native targeting and boosting capabilities of the platform.

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Myntra Blends Content and Commerce with Glamstream– A Shoppable Streaming Platform Set to Redefine Fashion Engagement

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Myntra Blends Content and Commerce with Glamstream– A Shoppable Streaming Platform Set to Redefine Fashion Engagement

Myntra is turning up the heat in the content-commerce field. The fashion e-commerce giant has just dropped Glamstream, its new shoppable content hub. A blend of entertainment, style cues, and instant shopping. In its first phase alone, Glamstream is offering over 500 hours of binge-worthy content. Think music videos, styling guides, travel edits, and even wedding fashion. Now, Myntra is a platform where watching meets wearing.

Leading this bold move, Myntra has teamed up with music label 0075 Penentertainment to make a serious pop culture splash. They’re the official fashion partner for Badshah’s hotly anticipated track “Jordan”. It is India’s first shoppable multi-brand music video. You can see seventeen curated looks straight from the video. If you want one, just tap into Glamstream and shop for the fits.

Glamstream is deeply rooted in today’s creator-led culture. It launches with an impressive library that’s ready to binge. With over 100 celebrities, it’s got insights, personalities, and a whole vibe. From 15 exclusives to 4,000+ episodes across formats like music, vlogs, podcasts, fictional series, and even talk shows, it’s a whole streaming universe inside an app. That’s not all. UGC (Ultimate Glam Clan), Myntra’s buzzing creator community of over a million, is integrated into real people, real style, and real influence.

The platform will also showcase exclusive drops by Vijay Deverakonda, Tabu, Zeenat Aman, Raveena Tandon, Tamannaah Bhatia, Khushi Kapoor, Bhumi Pednekar, Malaika Arora, and others in the Bollywood, OTT, and digital fraternity. Get ready for fearless styles, inside tips, and big fashion moments.

Chief Marketing Officer at Myntra, Sunder Balasubramanian, provided a vision on the move: We are excited about partnering with so many amazing voices to change the landscape of lifestyle shopping. With Glamstream, we are transforming how India shops and gets inspired. Young shoppers want fun, fast, and fresh, and Glamstream is all of that.”

Accessing Glamstream is simple. It lives right inside the Myntra app. Just tap the floating action button on the homepage, and you’re in. 

As the digital world gets louder, good content remains the best magnet. With Glamstream, Myntra is betting on it by bringing binge-watchers and binge-shoppers to the same runway.

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Organic India’s Latest Ad with Sachin Champions Verified Sourcing and the Ethics of ‘Real Organic

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Organic India’s Latest Ad with Sachin Champions Verified Sourcing and the Ethics of ‘Real Organic

One month back, legendary cricketer Sachin Tendulkar was declared the face of Organic India. It is a strategic initiative that is supposed to build consumer loyalty and extend the brand reach not only in India but also internationally.

The brand, a subsidiary of Tata Consumer Products Ltd, with the Master Blaster, launched a fresh campaign. The goal is to position Organic India as the country’s most trusted organic label. The campaign centres upon the crisp tagline: Sirf Naam Se Nahi Kya, Kaam Se Organic means not only by name, but Organic India is Organic by its work. The advertisement comes at an appropriate time because consumers are increasingly fascinated with the idea of clean, healthy, organic food.

Although people desire to eat better, the majority is not too sure about what makes something organic. It gets mixed up as some brands vaguely use terms such as Organic or Natural to sound authentic. The reality is that even now, a lot of people are not aware of what organic certification has to do. Accidentally, some individuals may purchase non-organic items. It’s a blurred space, and that’s where the campaign hits hard.

Sachin in the ad film conveys a clear message: “Sirf naam se nahi, kaam se Organic.” According to him, in the modern world, people should consider where their food is produced and how it is cultivated. The ad reflects integrity and encourages people to make careful choices.”

Punit Das, President, Packaged Beverages, India and South Asia, at Tata Consumer Products, breaks it down further: “While awareness about organic foods is growing, so is skepticism. People are not sure what’s real anymore. With this campaign, we want them to ask questions. Organic India considers that authenticity has to be achieved, but not a proclamation. Our credibility is earned through strenuous testing, disclosures of suppliers, and a heritage of trust. And yes, Sachin’s voice adds serious weight to that promise.”

The campaign rolled out well with digital platforms, influencer tie-ups, community storytelling, and more. Conceptualised and crafted by Creativeland Asia Advertising, the campaign is a thoughtful attempt to clear the clutter in an industry where everyone claims purity, but few prove it.

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One Logo, Big Trouble: How Shubman Gill’s Nike Tights Could Undermine BCCI’s Multi-Crore Adidas Pact

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One Logo, Big Trouble: How Shubman Gill’s Nike Tights Could Undermine BCCI’s Multi-Crore Adidas Pact

Shubman Gill is once again at the centre of attention—but not just for his on-field fireworks. The young Indian captain pulled off a masterclass at Edgbaston, smashing a double century in the first innings and following it up with another ton in the second. He stacked up a mammoth 269 runs in the first dig. Then returned with a blistering 161 before the innings wrapped. India had momentum with total dominance. The match had more than three sessions left. All signs pointed to them batting deep, but then… came an unexpected twist. A declaration in the 83rd over and a controversy nobody saw coming.

Gill walked out wearing black Nike tights. Yes, Nike with a clear white logo. Nothing wrong at first glance, right? Except that the tiny detail might just cost the BCCI ₹250 crores. Why? Because Adidas sponsors Team India, not its direct competitor, Nike. Under the terms of the current deal, all players are required to wear Adidas gear. So when the Indian captain walked out wearing a direct rival’s product, it raised eyebrows. Sources suggest Gill may’ve been in a hurry or possibly forgot. Maybe didn’t think it would matter, but it does. In sponsorships, every logo counts, and when that logo isn’t supposed to be there, it can cost. 

Now, the BCCI might issue a show-cause notice to Shubman Gill asking him to explain the breach. Why didn’t he comply with sponsorship terms? Whether it was an oversight or something else entirely. Either way, the optics are messy. The stakes are high with that much money and visibility involved, even wearing the wrong tights becomes a serious issue. 

Naturally, fans on social media weren’t going to miss it. Screenshots, comments, debates, it all blew up fast. The key question: Was it a contract breach? Or just an honest mistake?

The truth is, in marketing, actions often speak louder than contracts. We’ve seen it before. Celebrities endorse one brand, then use another in real life. It’s not always intentional, but it matters because influence is powerful and visible.

So, whether it was an innocent mistake or just poor timing, one thing’s clear: players, especially captains, don’t just play, they represent. In a world where cameras see everything, even a logo out of place can cost crores. Let’s see how BCCI handles this one. 

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BDCDA Flags Rising Ad Violations in India’s Online Pharmacy Sector, Urges CCI Crackdown on Unregulated Drug Promotions

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BDCDA Flags Rising Ad Violations in India’s Online Pharmacy Sector, Urges CCI Crackdown on Unregulated Drug Promotions

Online shopping is convenient, and no one can deny that; however, in the realm of medicine, that convenience has a high price. The anti-competitive and non-compliant nature of pharmaceutical advertising is becoming a breeding ground in the online pharmaceutical space in India. An increasing number of unregulated online drug stores are advertising aggressively with no accountability. Patient safety, ethical retail, and the foundation of a regulated healthcare ecosystem are threatened by the slick mobile banners behind the curtain. 

The Bangalore District Druggists and Chemists Association (BDCDA) has seen it all. The group has gone legal and reported its concern to the Competition Commission of India (CCI). They claim that unauthorized platforms are actively breaking advertising norms, creating distorted and deceptive market narratives.

BDCDA President B. Thirunavukkarasu laid it bare in a recent letter to CCI Chairperson Ravneet Kaur. He called out promotional campaigns, particularly by the Medplus chain that run wild on Facebook, WhatsApp, Instagram, and app stores. He accused these campaigns of saying they skirt regulation and bulldoze through public health ethics. Two problems are alarming with this. First, these online pharmacies are sidelining licensed community pharmacists, the ones who check prescriptions, catch errors, and keep consumers safe. Second, the unchecked rise of online promotions is now a breeding ground for bigger threats like self-medication, drug misuse, fake meds, and a dangerous spike in antimicrobial resistance.

Thirunavukkarasu detailed the consequences with concern. Because of emotional manipulation in ads, fear-based triggers, and false urgency, the public is slowly forgetting the value of trained professionals behind the counter. Apps are promoting prescription meds through influencers and discount pushers. No RMP oversight, stamp, verification, just swipe, buy, and repeat.

BDCDA warns of “psychological damage to public health” as a result of digital manipulation tactics. The BDCDA is not stopping complaints. They have demanded that the CCI launch a detailed legal investigation. This includes a forensic look into the pricing algorithms, backend operations, and ad delivery systems of unregulated sites, Medplus, and its affiliates.

They want the Commission to flex its powers under Sections 3 and 4 of the Competition Act, issue restraint orders, and bring back control over pharma ads. Specifically, they demand a freeze on campaigns promoting Schedule H/H1 drugs without prescriptions.

BDCDA wants a full-fledged Social Media and Digital Platform Monitoring Cell to include:

  • Narcotics Control Bureau
  • Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre
  • Central and State Drug Authorities
  • National Pharmaceutical Pricing Authority
  • Pharmacy Council of India
  • Department of Consumer Affairs
  • ASCI (Advertising Standards Council of India)

Together, these agencies could restore the checks and balances that once kept public trust intact. The bottom line is that medicine is not another product. Selling it like candy with big banners, 30-minute timers, and smiling influencers trivializes the risks. Yes, technology must evolve, but so should the guardrails that protect people.

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Tic Tac & Yashraj Mukhate Drop the Beat: “Refresh Your Vibe” Campaign Goes Live

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Tic Tac & Yashraj Mukhate Drop the Beat: “Refresh Your Vibe” Campaign Goes Live

Tic Tac, the iconic mint brand under the confectionery giant Ferrero Group, has launched a new digital campaign called Refresh Your Vibe. And guess who’s riding shotgun? None other than India’s viral music sensation Yashraj Mukhate.

If you’ve ever caught yourself humming “Rasode Mein Kaun Tha,” you know the vibe. Mukhate is a hit machine known for turning dialogues into viral anthems. The Aurangabad-based YouTube star has a knack for beat-making that sticks. Now, Tic Tac’s fresh identity joins forces with that same sticky energy.

The pulse of the campaign is a jingle. “Kyunki Meri Tic Tac Life Hai” is a catchy, custom track crafted by Mukhate. All you need to do is finish it with singing, dancing, and lip-sync. Record your take on the jingle and upload it to the official Refresh Your Vibe microsite. 

Entries open 11th July through 26th July 2025. The entry that best matches Mukhate’s beat and vibe lands a feature alongside him in the official music video, premiering on 22nd August 2025. No heavy filters needed, just authenticity or maybe a Tic Tac in hand. Every day from launch, participants stand a chance to win concert vouchers. Keeping the vibe high till the grand winner’s reveal on 30th July.

Tic Tac, introduced back in 1969, is a mint with a flip-top box with a clicky sound that has created a culture. The tiny mints, the compact packs, the low-cal freshness, it is all part of a refreshing legacy. With the Refresh Your Vibe campaign, Tic Tac dials it up for Gen Z. Yashraj Mukhate’s internet-breaking charm perfectly matches the campaign’s pulse. This collaboration doesn’t feel forced; it flows. The audience is being invited to co-create, which in today’s world is everything.

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Plush Teams Up with Swiggy Instamart to End Period Panic with a Fast, Funny, and Fresh Ad That’s Winning Eyeballs and Hearts

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Plush Teams Up with Swiggy Instamart to End Period Panic with a Fast, Funny, and Fresh Ad That’s Winning Eyeballs and Hearts

Every woman had experienced an unexpected period, cramps, or leakage with no backup in sight. It’s stressful, inconvenient, and way too familiar. Now, Plush and Instamart have teamed up to make sure help arrives in 10 minutes. In a bold move, Plush, India’s leading women’s wellness brand, has teamed up with Instamart, Swiggy’s lightning-fast delivery service, to completely flip the script on emergency period care. The star of the show is Plush’s Seamless Period Panty, a sleek, comfortable, undie-like essential.

Plush’s latest ad film delivers a punch of humor, nostalgia, and an idea. In the ad, an older sister goes full jugaad mode, layering pad after pad like a DIY engineer. When you think she’s nailed the art of leak-proofing, her younger sister casually orders a Plush Seamless Period Panty from Instamart in seconds. The message is clear: ditch the old fixes. Period care just grew up.

“For years, period care meant settling,” says Prince Kapoor, Co-founder at Plush. “We’ve always known it could be better. Our Seamless Period Panty offers protection of comfort, confidence, and style. With Instamart, we’ve made sure it shows up when it’s needed most.” It is like a peace of mind, delivered at the speed of need.

Founded in 2018, Plush began with one goal: to rewrite the rules of feminine wellness. Tired of rough, synthetic, rash-prone hygiene products, they introduced 100% US cotton sanitary pads. Since then, the lineup’s only grown into body care, intimate hygiene, skincare, and more. 

Instamart, Swiggy’s quick-commerce arm, has changed the game for instant essentials. From groceries to grooming tools to late-night cravings, it’s all just a tap away. With a network of hyperlocal dark stores and fast-track logistics, they have made 10–30-minute deliveries the new normal.

This partnership is a crucial decision for convenience. By joining forces, Plush and Instamart are addressing a real, messy, often-ignored pain point. So next time your period crashes the body early, don’t stress, just tap. Relief is 10 minutes away.Every woman had experienced an unexpected period, cramps, or leakage with no backup in sight. It’s stressful, inconvenient, and way too familiar. Now, Plush and Instamart have teamed up to make sure help arrives in 10 minutes. In a bold move, Plush, India’s leading women’s wellness brand, has teamed up with Instamart, Swiggy’s lightning-fast delivery service, to completely flip the script on emergency period care. The star of the show is Plush’s Seamless Period Panty, a sleek, comfortable, undie-like essential.

Plush’s latest ad film delivers a punch of humor, nostalgia, and an idea. In the ad, an older sister goes full jugaad mode, layering pad after pad like a DIY engineer. When you think she’s nailed the art of leak-proofing, her younger sister casually orders a Plush Seamless Period Panty from Instamart in seconds. The message is clear: ditch the old fixes. Period care just grew up.

“For years, period care meant settling,” says Prince Kapoor, Co-founder at Plush. “We’ve always known it could be better. Our Seamless Period Panty offers protection of comfort, confidence, and style. With Instamart, we’ve made sure it shows up when it’s needed most.” It is like a peace of mind, delivered at the speed of need.

Founded in 2018, Plush began with one goal: to rewrite the rules of feminine wellness. Tired of rough, synthetic, rash-prone hygiene products, they introduced 100% US cotton sanitary pads. Since then, the lineup’s only grown into body care, intimate hygiene, skincare, and more. 

Instamart, Swiggy’s quick-commerce arm, has changed the game for instant essentials. From groceries to grooming tools to late-night cravings, it’s all just a tap away. With a network of hyperlocal dark stores and fast-track logistics, they have made 10–30-minute deliveries the new normal.

This partnership is a crucial decision for convenience. By joining forces, Plush and Instamart are addressing a real, messy, often-ignored pain point. So next time your period crashes the body early, don’t stress, just tap. Relief is 10 minutes away.

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Paper Boat Didn’t Just Sell Us Drinks—It Got an Entire Generation to Sip on Their Own Childhood

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Paper Boat Didn’t Just Sell Us Drinks—It Got an Entire Generation to Sip on Their Own Childhood

In an FMCG marketplace always full of colas, carbonated drinks, and vitamin shots, Paper Boat did something fundamentally simple—it sold memories. While competitors resourced superlative health claims and hydration stats, Paper Boat presented the stories of childhood. And that whisper turned into a powerful marketing tactic.

From the outset, Paper Boat was positioned differently. Rather than competing on ingredients—it competed on feelings. Rather than featuring actors in its ads, the films depicted monsoon, school tiffins, and summer holidays. Rather than copy catching up with its offers, copy evoked poetry. For every sip, it promised a flashback—not just refreshment.

What made the brand’s marketing so smart is that it treated storytelling as its product. From the delicate illustrations on the pouches to the emotionally charged campaigns it spearheaded across social media, Paper Boat didn’t just market beverages—it marketed a moment in time. You weren’t buying aam panna, you were buying your nani’s kitchen. That kind of emotional clarity is worth gold in a market that quite often complicates product positioning.

The brand has also deftly avoided the also-ran trap of influencer bookings instead creating its own visual and verbal language and taking ownership of them both so that they are immediately identifiable to a fan. Paper Boat’s Instagram feed feels less like a product advertisement and more like a living collection of children’s memories from other Indians. It relies on the communities’ nostalgic memories rather than promotional flash — which has granted it cultural authority.

Its packaging is quietly disruptive, too. The soft pouch format, the handwritten fonts, the pastel colour schemes all point to a different type of consumption — slower, softer, and more mindful.

In a landscape of short attention spans and trends changing with radical frequency: Paper Boat illustrates the impact of emotional longevity, because while there are new flavours that might excite; feelings, especially the feelings tied to our past, stick around for longer. Paper Boat did not launch a product, it launched a feeling.

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Nykaa Didn’t Just Redefine Beauty E-Commerce—It Made Every Lipstick Feel Like a Personal Pep Talk

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Nykaa Didn’t Just Redefine Beauty E-Commerce—It Made Every Lipstick Feel Like a Personal Pep Talk

Prior to Nykaa, the experience of purchasing beauty products online was based on risk. Will this shade actually match me? Is this product real? Should I just go to the mall? Nykaa is not just an e-commerce platform; it has a playbook for beauty-led digital retail in India, it built trust and aspiration. 

Not only did most online marketplaces put every category of price and product into the same cart, Nykaa bet on beauty and nailed the vertical commerce model. Nykaa did not only sell the product, it was selling to lovers of makeup. It took reviews as content seriously, offered influencer try-ons, provided shade matching tools, and offered skincare routines styled like love letters. The nykaa experience in its beauty aisles was not just aimed at shopping, it was a content rich journey.  

Nykaa’s marketing has always felt less like retail marketing and more like an act of mentorship. e.tutorials, the breakdown of trending topics, nykaa tv, and The Beauty Book (in-house magazine) made shopping feel closer to self care. Nykaa did not sell lipstick, it sold confidence. Nykaa did not just sell discounts, it sold decoding.

But what truly set Nykaa apart in the e-commerce landscape? A hybrid strategy brought together an online component with an offline brick-and-mortar one. While others were all digital, Nykaa opened physical stores which felt like their own showrooms for discovery and engagement. Online offered scale and offline provided tactile experiences and together they provided credibility.

And let’s not forget the effectiveness of the Nykaa Femina Beauty Awards, its partnerships with influencers and the star-studded campaigns.  The brand did not simply become a marketplace; it became an ecosystem. While Bollywood faces may have been the face of those campaigns, the real stars were the millions of everyday beauty lovers who felt they were finally recognized, not just catered to.

Nykaa did not only disrupt beauty retail, they redefined it. They have remained focused, gone deep and amassed a brand which is about community just as much as it is about commerce.

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Blinkit Didn’t Build a Grocery App—It Built a Meme Machine That Happens to Deliver in 10 Minutes

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Blinkit Didn’t Build a Grocery App—It Built a Meme Machine That Happens to Deliver in 10 Minutes

In the battle for consumer attention. Blinkit picked speed as its weapon. It subsequently ensured that speed became a personality. Other e-commerce platforms are concerned with catalog sizes, price drops or festive deals. Blinkit’s strongest selling point is urgency. And it does not just home deliver your groceries in 10 minutes – it delivers your marketing even faster.

The brand is fully invested in moment marketing, using trending topics, memes and playful Twitter banter to position itself as much more than just a delivery app. Blinkit’s social media feeds do not seem like corporate accounts – they seem like a group chat. Be it smart responses to Zomato with all the finesse of a comeback to tweeting about mangoes as if it were an event of national significance, Blinkit has found a way to be stupidly relevant and ridiculously silly.

But the brilliance does not just lie in the tweets. Blinkit has cleverly blurred the line between fun and function. The brand improperly markets commodities like milk, bread or detergent as impulse buys. From the witty relevancy of push notifications within the app, to punchline banners in the category section, the experience brews more fun than shopping for necessities.

And the 10-minute promise? That’s the hook, but not the story. Blinkit’s real marketing genius is in how it builds habits. Need ice cream at midnight? You’ll remember Blinkit. Forgot dhania during cooking? Blinkit’s already halfway there.

It’s also finding clever offline opportunities—pop culture-themed store packaging, scooter ads, and collabs with creators who don’t just talk about convenience, they dramatize it.

Where most e-commerce players are still selling convenience with a straight face, Blinkit is winking at you—and customers are eating it up (sometimes literally, within 10 minutes).

In a space obsessed with scale and logistics, Blinkit proved that branding matters just as much as backend. Because sometimes, the fastest way to win hearts—and carts—is a joke well-timed, and an onion well-delivered.

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