Most advertisements today are designed to grab attention within seconds. Loud visuals, celebrity cameos, trending music, and punchy one-liners have become the standard formula for brands trying to survive shrinking attention spans online. But while many campaigns succeed at being visible, very few succeed at being genuinely memorable.
Asian Footwears’ latest campaign featuring Sunil Grover manages to do both.
At first glance, the ad feels chaotic in the best possible way. Set in the middle of an exaggerated qawwali performance, the campaign transforms what could have been a standard footwear commercial into a dramatic comedy act filled with theatrical singing, exaggerated reactions, and absurd humour. Instead of taking the predictable route of showcasing comfort through lifestyle montages or sports-driven visuals, the brand chooses complete entertainment. And that decision is exactly what makes the campaign stand out.
The central idea of the ad is brilliantly simple. Traditionally, audiences throwing shoes at performers is seen as the ultimate sign of disapproval. Asian Footwears flips that cultural reference entirely. In the campaign’s world, nobody would dare throw their shoes because the footwear is simply too comfortable and valuable to part with. That single insight becomes the foundation for the film’s humour, storytelling, and product positioning.
Rather than forcefully inserting the product into the narrative, the campaign lets the joke naturally communicate the brand promise. Comfort and desirability become part of the humour itself, making the messaging feel organic instead of overly promotional.
What elevates the ad further is its commitment to the qawwali setup. The setting is not treated as a gimmick or aesthetic choice, it becomes the identity of the campaign. The harmonium-led music, poetic dialogue delivery, dramatic close-ups, synchronized reactions, and exaggerated seriousness create a world that feels deeply rooted in Indian cultural performance traditions. In a digital advertising landscape heavily influenced by global aesthetics and polished minimalism, the ad unapologetically embraces loud, theatrical, desi storytelling.
And then there is Sunil Grover. The campaign works largely because of his ability to fully commit to absurdity without making it feel forced. Grover has built a reputation for turning eccentric characters into instantly memorable personalities, and the ad uses that strength perfectly. His expressions, pauses, singing style, and exaggerated confidence give the film its comedic rhythm. Importantly, he does not feel like a celebrity awkwardly inserted into an advertisement. Instead, he becomes the centre of the story itself.
That distinction matters because modern audiences are increasingly resistant to obvious advertising. Consumers today skip, scroll past, or ignore content the moment it starts feeling too sales-driven. Asian Footwears avoids that trap by prioritising entertainment before branding. The ad feels closer to a comedy sketch people would voluntarily share online than a conventional product commercial.
The campaign is also sharply aligned with internet culture. Its dialogues, exaggerated format, and expressive reactions are naturally meme-worthy and highly shareable across short-form platforms. In an era where brands are constantly trying to manufacture virality, this campaign achieves it by simply understanding what audiences genuinely enjoy watching.
Another reason the ad feels refreshing is because of how confidently it leans into Indian humour. Many modern footwear campaigns attempt to appear sleek, aspirational, or globally styled. Asian Footwears does the opposite. It embraces chaos, performance, cultural references, and over-the-top comedy without hesitation. Ironically, that authenticity makes the campaign feel far more distinctive.
Link to the ad:






