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Good Luck Getting This New Steph Curry Song Out of Your Head

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Could Steph Curry be the star of 2018's top song? Probably not. (Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)

The year is only a week old, but some people are saying that 2018's best song is already here. And it features the Bay Area's beloved Steph Curry.

The Warriors star is featured in a new online ad for the water filtration company Brita, along with YouTube personality Rudy Mancuso. Curry helps Mancuso stick to his New Year's resolutions while singing a melody that is bound to get stuck in your head.

It's being called "inspirational" and "so bad it's amazing," and Twitter is both loving it and loving to hate it.

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I spoke with Santa Clara University professor Chuck Byers, a marketing and brand management expert, about how this ad fits into Curry's larger brand.

What did you think of the ad?

Candidly, I loved it. That song is definitely targeted to a younger audience. Clearly not something targeted to middle-aged professors. I think it was a great job matching creative to the target audience.

This isn't Curry's first offbeat ad. How do these ads fit into his larger brand?

I think it fits into his brand because he definitely comes across as hip. He knows what's in. He knows what's cool. He knows how to reach people through that genre.

Is there anything more substantial here than a basketball star singing a goofy song?

I think so. When we look at online ads, the first thing we encourage people to do is to be entertaining and bring value. If you listen, it doesn't even mention Brita. So it meets the first criteria of a great piece of online creative in that it is entertaining, it is funny. It creates audience involvement because people are going to watch because they love it or they hate it, and involvement is what it really looks to me they're trying to target. Along with what I would consider a public service message of eat healthy, drink healthy.

Could this be setting up a post-basketball career move for Curry into acting or music?

Definitely, he is pointing to a post-basketball career as a valued spokesperson for a lot of potential brands.

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