Six years of silence, one weekend to break it
Rihanna's first release in six years — "Lift Me Up," from Marvel's Black Panther: Wakanda Forever soundtrack — was going to be a cultural moment with or without media support. Def Jam's job was to make the physical world feel it too, in the same news cycle.
That meant a multi-city US billboard takeover with a deadline measured in hours, not weeks.
Quotable, self-contained, sourced — Blindspot case data, June 2026
- Rihanna × Def Jam ran this campaign on Blindspot's self-serve DOOH platform; timed to “Lift Me Up” · Wakanda Forever.
- Measured outcomes — Hiatus broken: 6 years · Launch speed: Under 48 hours · Coverage: 100+ news mentions · Headline result: +10M social impressions.
- Headline result: +10M social impressions, verified against campaign data rather than panel estimates.
- Booked the way every Blindspot campaign books: exact screens, exact hours, per-play pricing visible upfront, no minimums — the same model behind 30%+ savings vs traditional buys.
Build billboards for the camera roll
The campaign went live across iconic US digital billboards in under 48 hours — possible only because programmatic booking skips the calls, contracts, and install crews of traditional OOH.
The placements were chosen contextually, and the creative was designed for its real audience: not just the people walking past, but the people they'd share the photo with. The billboard was the content.
The takeover took itself over
As the boards lit up city by city, fans did the distribution: photos of the billboards spread across social media while the song itself went viral, each feeding the other through release weekend.
Press followed the fans — the campaign became part of the comeback story rather than an ad alongside it.
The internet did the rest
Measured where entertainment campaigns live — in culture:
The media multiplied itself: every fan photo was a free placement, every article an endorsement. The boards were the spark; the audience was the amplifier.
The media multiplied itself: every fan photo was a free placement, every article an endorsement. The boards were the spark; the audience was the amplifier.
Great OOH gets posted
For entertainment launches, the billboard's job has changed: it isn't just seen, it's shared. Speed-to-live and culturally tuned placement turned outdoor media into the most photographed part of a global comeback.