Daily Signals 26.11.2025

Signals

Johnnie Walker updates its iconic Keep Walking tagline, Dubai opens restaurant led by AI chef and young boys in the UK are feeling unseen and misunderstood.

Johnnie Walker rewrites Keep Walking for the individualist age

US – Diageo-owned whisky brand Johnnie Walker is updating its iconic Keep Walking platform to focus on personal expression over collective milestones, reflecting changing behaviours among younger consumers.

First launched in 1999, the campaign traditionally emphasised collective spirit and shared progress. The refreshed iteration, however, shifts the focus to solo pursuits and self-expression. Drawing on how people increasingly use ‘keep’ language online to articulate their ambitions and emotions, Johnnie Walker identified six recurring themes – motivation, action, communication, emotion, success and identity. These insights shaped a new creative campaign that celebrates everyday ‘keeps’, from ‘keep playing’ and ‘keep dreaming’ to ‘keep trusting’ and ‘keep searching’. The resulting films present vignettes of people dancing, skateboarding and pursuing personal passions.

The move aligns with broader shifts among younger consumers, who are ‘redefining progress on their own terms’, says John Williams, global head of whisk(e)y at Diageo. Citing a McKinsey & Co report, the brand notes that young people of today are less likely to define themselves through traditional life-stage milestones – a theme explored in our Gen Z Now & Next report. Instead, they are prioritising what feels meaningful, achievable and personally fulfilling, and often grounded in the present.

These changing behaviours also affect how people socialise, a core consideration for alcohol brands. While friends, family and cultural moments remain important, younger consumers are increasingly dedicating free time to personal hobbies, self-development and individual expression. For legacy brands like Johnnie Walker, this requires balancing their social heritage with the desire to resonate with more individualist, self-directed lifestyles.

Strategic opportunity

From tailored content and digital experiences to community-building that recognises personal milestones, campaigns that reflect both self-directed progress and social connection will resonate most with younger audiences

Dubai opens first restaurant led by an AI chef

The Middle East – Woohoo is Dubai’s latest restaurant opening, where the menu is created by an AI system rather than a traditional chef. The concept emerged after restaurateur Ahmet Oytun Cakir used ChatGPT to develop a lamb dish that became a best-seller, prompting him to explore a fully AI-driven model.

Woohoo is powered by Chef Aiman, a large language model trained on thousands of recipes and flavour datasets by UAE-based Vivid Studios. Aiman generates dishes that human chefs refine, resulting in a menu that mixes familiar crowd-pleasers with experimental offerings such as the pulsing Dinosaur Heart tartare and Molecular Burrata dotted with yuzu and tomato spheres.

Situated in Dubai’s futuristic downtown urban development, the restaurant’s cyberpunk-style space uses immersive audio, video and a central quantum computer to shape the experience.

Beyond creativity, Aiman acts as a tool for kitchen efficiency, waste reduction and marketing, signalling how AI may soon influence both back- and front-of-house operations across hospitality.

In our AI Nourished Foodscapes report, we analysed how AI-enhanced food and hospitality experiences tap into consumers’ growing appetite for multi-sensory and interactive experiences and novelty foods.

Photo by Ayrat via pexels

Strategic opportunity

Consider how you can use AI to deliver dynamic, playful food moments – from algorithm-generated menus to personalised tasting prompts – turning novelty into an ongoing hospitality differentiator

Stat: UK study reveals a generation of young boys feel unseen

Whoop, US Whoop, US

UK – Male Allies UK has unveiled a stark snapshot of how boys across Britain are navigating identity, belonging and uncertainty. 

Released at the House of Commons, The Voice of the Boys report featured insights from more than 1,000 boys aged 11–15 across 37 schools, blending survey data with deeper listening sessions.

The findings reveal a generation who feel unseen and under-prepared: 81% say there aren’t enough spaces to be a boy, while 79% are unclear about what masculinity even means. 

Connection is strained, with 72% lacking more than one person who knows them well, and trust in institutions is low – 82% say they don’t trust politicians. More than half (54%) believe boys now have it harder than girls and 65% feel school isn’t equipping them for the future.

This aligns with findings from our Decoding Masculinity analysis, which highlights how the rise of the manosphere demands more nuanced representations of men. Successfully unpicking the modern bro is emerging as a social imperative – unlocking healthier identities, more authentic male narratives and new pathways to connection.

Strategic opportunity

From mentorship programmes and youth clubs to storytelling platforms that offer nuanced, relatable portrayals of modern masculinity, create spaces and experiences that foster male connection and exploration of identity

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