Doritos Loaded pairs Gordon Ramsay and George Russell in new F1 ad
Doritos Loaded’s new ad with Gordon Ramsay and George Russell ties a fictional stunt to eight recipes and F1 fan-zone food trucks.
Doritos Loaded has released a new global commercial featuring Gordon Ramsay and Mercedes-AMG PETRONAS Formula One driver George Russell, blending food preparation with a Formula 1-themed fictional stunt.
The details were outlined in the company’s newsroom announcement, which also positions the work as part of Doritos’ existing partnerships with the Mercedes-AMG PETRONAS Formula One Team and Formula 1.
Doritos Loaded is bringing together celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay and Mercedes-AMG PETRONAS Formula One driver George Russell in a new global campaign aimed at blending food, motorsport, and entertainment.
Table of contents
Jump to each section:
- What the campaign is actually promoting
- How the film uses a “fictional stunt” to earn attention
- Why food, sport, and live experiences are being bundled together
- What this means for marketers
What the campaign is actually promoting
The creative centers on Doritos Loaded as a “meal proposition” built on crunchy Doritos topped with protein, vegetables, seasonings, and sauces. In the commercial, Ramsay prepares “Doritos Loaded Hellfire Chicken Nachos” using his signature Hellfire sauce.
Beyond the spot itself, the collaboration includes a plan for Ramsay to develop eight Doritos Loaded recipes designed to show how consumers can combine Doritos with fresh ingredients to make shareable meals.
Those recipes are also intended for restaurant and hospitality operators in selected global markets, extending the campaign from consumer media into foodservice distribution and menu experimentation.
How the film uses a “fictional stunt” to earn attention
The narrative device is simple: a Doritos Loaded food truck speeds through city streets while Ramsay continues assembling the dish as ingredients fly through the air. The reveal at the end is that Russell is the mystery driver.
That “who’s driving?” structure functions like a brand-safe suspense hook, making the celebrity pairing part of the story rather than a static endorsement. It also mirrors motorsport pacing: controlled chaos, precision under pressure, and a finish-line twist.
Importantly, the stunt is framed as fictional, which can help keep the focus on entertainment value while reducing expectations that the brand is attempting a literal motorsport crossover.
Why food, sport, and live experiences are being bundled together
Doritos Loaded frames the campaign around “high-energy sporting and cultural moments,” using Formula 1 as both a media platform and an on-the-ground environment for sampling.
The partnership extends into Formula 1 fan experiences throughout the race season, including Formula 1 fan zone food trucks that will feature two exclusive recipes tied to the collaboration. This creates a loop between:
- A broadcastable hero asset (the commercial)
- A repeatable content system (eight recipes)
- In-person trial at scale (fan zone trucks)
The release also notes availability through food trucks, delivery apps, and restaurant partners, and cites select areas in Madrid, Barcelona, and London, with expansion planned to additional cities over the next few months, including the Netherlands, France, and Germany.
What this means for marketers
Celebrity-led campaigns work best when the talent is tied to a repeatable format, not just a one-off spot. This Doritos Loaded activation is built to travel across channels and contexts, from at-home meal inspiration to trackside trial.
1) Treat the “hero film” as a doorway to a system
The commercial introduces the pairing, but the eight-recipe rollout provides ongoing reasons to keep the campaign alive across social, retail, and foodservice touchpoints.
2) Use partnerships to make sampling feel like entertainment
Fan zone food trucks turn product trial into an experience, which can be more memorable than standard event sampling, especially when the menu items are positioned as limited or exclusive.
3) Make the product behavior explicit
The recipes demonstrate the intended consumption pattern: Doritos plus fresh ingredients. That kind of “how it’s eaten” clarity can reduce friction for new or lapsed buyers.
4) Design for both trackside and at-home audiences
The framing acknowledges two audiences: racegoers and viewers at home. Structuring activations for both groups helps prevent event marketing from becoming a silo.
The broader lesson is that modern sports-adjacent marketing increasingly rewards campaigns that connect media, live environments, and product utility into one narrative. For brands operating in crowded categories, the differentiator is often not the celebrity itself, but the distribution plan and the repeatable content engine that comes with the partnership.

