Is Tyla in the new Coca‑Cola ad?
Unpacking the viral summer campaign featuring Tyla’s song “Bliss”
( By Carmichael Phillip )
This article dives deep into whether South African pop sensation Tyla appears in Coca‑Cola’s latest summer advertisement, what role she plays, and why the campaign has become a talking point. We explore the ad’s storyline, creative strategy, real-world impact—and yes, we’ll include videos and real examples to bring it all into perspective.
📺 18pt Italic/Bold Subheading | color #461254: Tyla’s Cameo in Coke’s “Road Trip” Spot
Coca‑Cola’s flagship spot in the new “Enjoy the moment with a Coca‑Cola” summer push is called “Road Trip.” In it, we follow a group of friends cruising through the desert when a familiar face pulls up—none other than Tyla herself. The ad features:
A tired college student packing to move, feeling overwhelmed.
A friend opens a Coke, opening the door to spontaneity.
Cut to desert highway, convertible, laughter—and Tyla rolling by in her red convertible, giving a wave. The track playing? Her own new song, “Bliss.”
A video version is available online. Here’s a highlight:
This is the central confirmation: yes, Tyla is in the new Coca‑Cola ad—driving the story, soundtracked by her hit single, and adding star power to reinforce the theme: unplug, enjoy.
📺 18pt Italic/Bold Subheading | color #461254: Why Tyla? The Gen Z & Music Strategy
Coca‑Cola is targeting Gen Z with a campaign encouraging them to “ditch screen time” and enjoy real moments. Featuring a rising star whose vibe resonates with a younger audience is genius strategy:
Tyla recently became the first South African artist in decades to enter the Billboard Hot 100 with “Water”, and won a Grammy for Best African Music Performance.
Her new track “Bliss” syncs with the ad, creating a memorable audio-visual hook .
Her appearance injects relatability, authenticity, and representational diversity into the brand—especially appealing to global and multicultural Gen Z consumers.
In short: Tyla isn’t just a cameo; she’s the emotional & musical core of the campaign.
📺 18pt Italic/Bold Subheading | color #461254: Creative Execution vs. Ad Tropes
Reviews highlight that the spot follows Coca‑Cola’s familiar summer ad formula—sunny visuals, close friendships, a spark of magic from an ice‑cold Coke. Yet Tyla’s presence and her aspirational energy breathe fresh life into the concept:
“Their latest ‘summer’ campaign… ticks all of the traditional Coke boxes.”
“Rarely has a Coke commercial played so very much exactly like … a Coke commercial.”
Creative insight: the ad knows its place, but leans in with a modern twist—musical, aspirational, gender‑fluid in its inclusivity.
📺 18pt Italic/Bold Subheading | color #461254: Campaign Scope & Integrated Activation
The “Road Trip” spot launched across TV, streaming, social media and digital channels.
It includes interactive digital elements: QR codes link to a “summer scratch-off” sweepstakes for prizes—from AMC tickets to travel vouchers.
Tyla drives social buzz: her Instagram “Take me out ma mind @cocacola #ad” reel earned 174K likes, plus TikToks like “YOU TAKE ME TO BLISS #cocacola #bliss #ad” have garnered over 100K likes.
This extends awareness far beyond traditional media, making the partnership feel organic and shareable.
📺 18pt Italic/Bold Subheading | color #461254: Fan & Industry Reactions
Public and industry response has been enthusiastic:
Marketing Dive notes Tyla “pulls up alongside a group of friends” in the ad, spotlighting the unplugged lifestyle theme
marketingdive.com.
Muse by Clios calls the tone “tongue in cheek” and highlights how the lead actress’s face almost says, “It’s Tyla! Holy freaking cow, we’re in a Coke ad!”.
CherryFlava lauds how the ad “ticks all the traditional Coke boxes”—trust, emotion, tropical visuals—while still staying fresh.
Even critiques note it’s not award‑winning complex, but it does exactly what it’s meant to: feel fun, feel like Coke.
📺 18pt Italic/Bold Subheading | color #461254: The Music of “Bliss” & Brand Sync
The heart of the ad is Tyla’s new song, “Bliss.” Played throughout the 30‑second spot, it helps:
Tie Tyla directly to the brand narrative;
Play off her rhythmic, upbeat style for a positive vibe;
Reinforce summer as both a feeling and a soundtrack.
Her track isn’t a backdrop—it is the backdrop. Coke relies on its emotional punch to drive engagement and replay value.
📺 18pt Italic/Bold Subheading | color #461254: Measuring Success & What Comes Next
While full metrics are proprietary, early indicators suggest strong performance:
High social media engagement: Tyla’s content is going viral on TikTok, Instagram and beyond .
WPP Open X and agency partners positioned the campaign as strategically targeted to Gen Z, and initial rollouts across multiple channels‚ including TV and sweepstakes, show mainstream and digital coverage.
Expansion plans include a second spot, “Pool Party,” debuting in June, and global rollout following North America.
Upcoming analysis will look at reach, brand perception shifts, song streaming bump, and sweepstakes participation—metrics Tyla and Coke will both watch closely.
Conclusion
Yes, Tyla is in the new Coca‑Cola ad—front and center. She drives the creative with a vibrant cameo and by supplying the song “Bliss” as the campaign’s emotional anchor. The ad blends familiar Coke branding with fresh energy, boosted by Tyla’s emerging global stardom. This campaign exemplifies effective brand‑artist collaboration, capturing the attention of Gen Z with a simple message: unplug, share a Coke, and cherish real moments.
Key Points at a Glance
Element Role / Impact
Tyla Main feature, cameo driver of story
“Bliss” song Core soundtrack, mood set-up
Campaign theme Unplugged, real-life engagement
Creative agency WPP Open X (Ogilvy, VML, Publicis)
Interactive layer QR sweepstakes, social activations
Results so far Viral via TikTok/Instagram, strong buzz
In short: Tyla’s appearance isn’t just symbolic—it’s strategic. She ties the campaign emotionally, musically, and culturally. Coke didn’t just feature a celebrity—they leveraged an ascending voice to narrate a story that feels both aspirational and inclusive. For anyone asking, “Is Tyla in the new Coke ad?”—the answer is a resounding yes, and she’s central to it.