More Products, Less Press: How âWicked: For Goodâ Marketing Stayed Relevant While Scaling Back
- - More Products, Less Press: How âWicked: For Goodâ Marketing Stayed Relevant While Scaling Back
Rebecca RubinNovember 13, 2025 at 11:30 PM
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Before âWickedâ landed on the big screen a year ago, Universal told cinema owners of its simple goal for promoting the movie musical. It planned to be, per chief marketing officer Michael Moses, âjust short of obnoxious.â
Sure enough, the studio behind the pink-and-green publicity machine delivered an epic onslaught of all things Oz. A $7 million Super Bowl spot. Starbucks themed drinks and partnerships with 400 other corporate brands. A splashy stop at the Paris Summer Olympics. Scores of magazine covers. And a press junket for the ages (almost 12 months later, weâre still âholding spaceâ for the lyrics of âDefying Gravityâ).
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âThey needed to hit people over the head,â says one executive at a rival studio.
Thatâs because Universal was establishing âWicked,â based on the Broadway smash, not as a fizzy musical for moms and daughters, but as a four-quadrant extravaganza on the scale of âBarbie.â The efforts paid off: âWickedâ launched with $112 million and set a box office record for stage-to-screen adaptations with $756 million globally. The film became a juggernaut on digital platforms and scored 10 Oscar nominations. Cultural ubiquity achieved.
With âWicked: For Good,â which drops into theaters on Nov. 21, Universal is aiming for a slightly subtler approach. Itâs relative, of course: Still everywhere. Less âobnoxious.â Though marketing efforts never really faded â Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande performed at the Academy Awards in March â the studio waited until summer to officially ignite the second movieâs promotional blitz. (âYou canât miss us if we never go away,â Moses told Variety last November.) In comparison, the first film began its rollout at the Super Bowl, eight months prior to release.
âOne of the words to describe the marketing of the new release would be ârestraint.â The studio has pulled back,â says Jason Squire, professor emeritus at the USC School of Cinematic Arts. âWeâre not inundated like we were on the first movie.â
Universal has good reason to make the adjustments. After all, âWickedâ is a known entity this time around. And thereâs a risk of consumer fatigue in trying to keep it in the zeitgeist for two years. With that in mind, Universal did extensive exit polling to assess the audienceâs tolerance for all the pink-and-green goodness. Research found that fans didnât mind the deluge because the inescapable campaign made âWickedâ feel like a leave-the-home-worthy event.
Though a commercial gamble, there were cost-saving advantages to scheduling a yearlong intermission. Marketing executives usually need to spend big bucks to reintroduce a property after lengthy gaps. That wasnât necessary here since âWickedâ never left the public consciousness. The studio shelled out roughly $90 million on global promotional efforts compared with the initial filmâs nearly $150 million marketing budget.
âBy having the movies one year apart, you can leverage the residual goodwill and profound marketing expenses from the first film to the second,â Squire says.
Centerpieces of the âFor Goodâ campaign include the two-hour NBC musical special âWicked: One Wonderful Night,â a âDancing With the Starsâ episode takeover and a behind-the-scenes podcast hosted by Vanity Fairâs Chris Murphy. And, of course, there are brand partnerships galore: Dunkinâ is offering âWickedâ green matcha, pink refresher and Munchkins (duh), American Girl has Glinda and Elphaba dolls, while Procter & Gamble created a head-spinning array of household products with Swiffer, Secret deodorant and Cascade. All told, Universal partnered with 400 brands, only 165 of which were repeated from the original campaign.
Like the first film, âFor Goodâ is backed by NBCUniversalâs Symphony marketing push, in which various divisions of the sprawling media company work together to promote a project. Those outsize efforts, including a âWicked Weekâ takeover on âTodayâ and âThe Tonight Show,â as well as custom promo on NBC and Peacock series like âThe Traitorsâ and âReal Housewives,â are separate from the filmâs marketing budget.
Universal is eschewing a press junket and making the A-list ensemble â including Grande, Erivo, Jonathan Bailey, Jeff Goldblum, Michelle Yeoh, Bowen Yang and director Jon M. Chu â available for fewer interviews. Instead, the stars are gathering for fan-centric events in cities like SĂŁo Paulo, Paris and London before the North American premiere in New York City.
Itâs too soon to rejoicify, but âWicked: For Goodâ is tracking a bigger opening than its predecessor. A question is whether this entry will enjoy the same kind of staying power as the initial film. Thereâs commercial concern because the second half of âWickedâ is much darker than the stage showâs fizzy first act.
However, box office analysts predict the fantasy musical will endure in theaters because thereâs not much else geared toward females (thatâs the demographic likely to drive the repeat viewings) for the rest of the year. And it isnât a sequel, meaning its existence wasnât simply a cash grab to capitalize on the originalâs success. Audiences are returning to find out how the story ends â and how Elphaba and Glindaâs journey down the Yellow Brick Road ties into âThe Wizard of Oz.â
âThe first movie was about priming the pump,â says an executive at another rival studio. âNow they donât want to let air out of the tire.â
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