MUMBAI: A forearm scar has propelled an ordinary user into the centre of an internet spectacle. Dr Gill, posting from the handle @ikpsgill1 on X, shared an image of a scar that looked strikingly similar to the iconic three stripes of Adidas, and cheekily asked the brand for free merchandise.
The post detonated.
Users swarmed the replies, tagging adidas, riffing on the resemblance and spinning the moment into meme gold. What began as a personal curiosity quickly mutated into a global conversation, powered not by marketing spend but by humour and coincidence.
The episode underscores a hard truth for brands: the internet rewards the accidental. Carefully engineered campaigns often struggle for attention, while spontaneous, unscripted moments travel at algorithmic speed. Authenticity, however trivial, cuts through.
Adidas may respond, or stay silent. It scarcely matters. The internet has already delivered its verdict. In a culture hungry for novelty, even an accidental scar can become a logo, and the crowd becomes the loudest marketing engine on earth.

