The faux-candid rollout places Raisin Bran squarely within a growing trend of brands using staged paparazzi moments to promote their products. It’s an approach that blurs the line between entertainment, tabloid culture, and advertising.
In the last 24 months, brands including CeraVe and Velveeta have used such tactics, dispatching celebrities into public spaces with products conspicuously in hand.
CeraVe’s Super Bowl campaign famously fueled weeks of speculation by sending Michael Cera around New York carrying bags of moisturizer, while Velveeta enlisted Julia Fox to debut a branded hair look courtside at a Knicks game. In each case, the photos weren’t leaked so much as choreographed.
For Raisin Bran, tapping Shatner adds a winking layer to the formula. The actor’s outsized persona transforms the idea of him being caught with cereal into a gag, ensuring the reveal lands as a punchline rather than a bait-and-switch.
If the goal was to make a fiber-forward cereal part of the Super Bowl conversation before kickoff, mission accomplished.

