Liquid Death BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.
Liquid Death has had a wild few days and does not seem to be slowing down its march from cult beverage upstart to marketing juggernaut. First, the biggest business headline is the appointment of Ricky Khetarpaul, a veteran with stints at PepsiCo, Health-Ade, Lavazza, and Walgreens, as the new Chief Financial Officer. This move, reported by Beverage Digest, is being viewed as a sign that Liquid Death is gearing up for bigger things in the finance and operations space and perhaps even laying the groundwork for a future IPO. On the entertainment front, Liquid Death’s latest stunt is a highly irreverent campaign with the new “Running Man” film, tying the brand to the upcoming blockbuster hitting theaters November 14. Social mentions and buzz are pouring in as the company rolled out a co-branded ad where the host of the fictional reality show tells you to “quench your thirst for murder with the thirst murderer, Liquid Death.” DesignRush notes the campaign’s synergy, while Nerd News Social calls it a “perfect match” for both brands’ bombastic energy and over-the-top style.
Meanwhile, Adweek just ran a headline calling out Liquid Death’s “ruthless media strategy,” not just its comedy, as the real driver behind its explosive sales. Chief Media Officer Benoit Vatere spoke at Brandweek, pulling the curtain back on how the brand manages to so deftly convert viral moments into product flying off store shelves by constantly shifting ad dollars across retail platforms and fiercely optimizing for measurable results. He admits there’s no real loyalty in CPG but that Liquid Death’s small army of superfans and high-frequency buyers keep the retail engines humming.
On the culture front, Liquid Death continues to blend punk sensibility and celebrity sparkle. The brand’s Halloween collab with Martha Stewart,“Dismembered Moments Luxury Candle”—a paraffin severed hand clutching a can—landed just in time for the spooky season and saturated Instagram feeds for days. Martha.com is the sole retailer, which only ramped up buzz. In business news, Liquid Death’s most recent private investment round pegged its value at $1.4 billion according to Forge Global, with top investors like Live Nation and stars like Wiz Khalifa and Josh Brolin on board.
Besides the headlines, the online chatter has remained lively. Liquid Death’s irreverence in marketing—turning negative reviews into a metal album, hiring comedian Bert Kreischer and adult film star Cheri DeVille for promos, and making sober celebrities like Steve-O die-hard fans—continues to spark conversations across TikTok and X. While the company is not immune to skeptics who point out discrepancies in its sustainability story, its anti-corporate image and viral entertainment machine are showing no signs of flatlining. Critics wonder how long that momentum can last up against beverage Goliaths like Coke and Nestle, but for now the latest news cycle is all Liquid Death, all the time.
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