Cover image of show Brand Crimes + Other Offenses

Brand Crimes + Other Offenses

Podcast by Sasha Monique

English

Business

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About Brand Crimes + Other Offenses

Brand Crimes & Other Offenses is the cultural court where strategy meets misconduct.Each week, host Sasha Monique, brand architect and creative strategist, investigates a new case from the world of branding, marketing, and modern commerce. Through forensic deep dives, cultural analysis, and sharp behavioral insight, she dissects why brands succeed, why they crash, and why some decisions should qualify as strategic felonies.From iconic rebrands and PR disasters to psychological frameworks, cultural trends, and confessions from founders, Sasha brings street-luxe intelligence, razor-sharp commentary, and unapologetic clarity to every episode.Part investigation.Part education.Part creative therapy session.All precision.Whether you're a CMO, a founder, a strategist, or a culture lover, this is where you come to understand the world of brands through a smarter, sharper, more culturally relevant lens.

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9 episodes

episode The $53,000 Question: Why Your Influencer Strategy Just Became a Legal Liability artwork

The $53,000 Question: Why Your Influencer Strategy Just Became a Legal Liability

You think your influencer campaign is working. The FTC thinks it’s a liability. Right now, brands are running influencer programs like it’s still 2019… loose contracts, vague disclosure, no monitoring, no documentation. Meanwhile, enforcement has ramped up fast, penalties are sitting at $53,088 per post, and every single piece of content counts as its own violation. So that “successful” campaign? It can turn into a multi-million dollar problem overnight. In this episode, I’m breaking down what actually changed, why brands are so exposed right now, and how influencer marketing quietly became one of the highest-risk areas in modern marketing. We’re getting into the real math, the lawsuits nobody wants to talk about, and the compliance infrastructure most brands don’t have but absolutely need. Find me on Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/sashamoniquecreates] | TikTok | Website [http://www.iniciocreative.com] | LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/iniciocreative/] | Blog [https://iniciocreative.com/blog/] 00:00 Brand Crimes Intro 00:28 The FTC Letter Shock 01:55 The Real Crime 03:56 Campaign Math Nightmare 06:02 Rules Changed Fast 08:56 Enforcement Gets Real 11:43 What’s Coming Next 15:09 Who Actually Gets Targeted 16:46 What Compliance Really Looks Like 20:51 What You Need to Fix Now 23:22 Final Warning

9 Apr 2026 - 24 min
episode Marketing’s Extinction Event: The Middle Layer Is Collapsing artwork

Marketing’s Extinction Event: The Middle Layer Is Collapsing

What’s happening in marketing right now is not a “future of AI” conversation. It’s not a trend. It’s not something to casually keep an eye on. It’s already happening. Teams are being restructured because the math no longer works. Not because people are bad at their jobs, but because a lot of those jobs were built on limitations that don’t exist anymore and the layer getting hit first is the middle. If your role is built around analyzing, optimizing, coordinating, or managing execution, this episode is going to hit a little close to home. I’m breaking down how marketing actually functions behind the scenes, what changes when a multi-million dollar team can be replaced by a fraction of that cost, and why companies are making these decisions faster than people expected. Then we zoom out… because it’s not just internal. Consumers aren’t behaving the same way either. People aren’t searching like they used to. They’re asking. And AI is deciding what gets recommended before most brands ever get seen. At the same time, people can feel when something is overly automated, and they don’t like it. So now brands are trying to be more efficient internally while still feeling human externally… which is where things start to get messy. We’re also getting into what’s actually still valuable, what skills are becoming non-negotiable, and why marketing is starting to compress into something that looks very different from what most people built their careers on. If you’ve been feeling like things are shifting but you can’t quite put your finger on it, this is that conversation. Episode Timeline 00:00 Show Intro 00:28 The Layoff Story 01:22 What’s Actually Happening 02:38 How Marketing Works 03:32 The Economics Shift 04:47 Why The Middle Is Getting Hit 08:07 Search vs AI Behavior 08:53 AI As Gatekeeper 12:29 Consumer Response 15:14 The Hourglass Model 15:55 Human Advantage 18:14 Skill Shift 19:42 Risk Check 21:49 Timeline 23:24 What To Do 25:15 Final Reality Check

26 Mar 2026 - 26 min
episode Platform Dependency: Why Building on Instagram Is a Brand Risk artwork

Platform Dependency: Why Building on Instagram Is a Brand Risk

In this episode of Brand Crimes & Other Offenses, Sasha Monique opens a case file on one of the most expensive mistakes creators, founders, and online businesses are still making in real time: building their entire business on platforms they do not own. This is not a conversation about whether Instagram works. It obviously does. This is a conversation about what happens when your reach, revenue, and relationship to your audience all depend on a platform that can change the rules without warning, cut your visibility overnight, and still convince you that the solution is to keep posting harder. Sasha breaks down the data behind collapsing organic reach, the psychological trap that keeps people dependent on social media, and the difference between borrowed attention and owned relationships. She also walks through what smarter creators have already figured out, why email still converts at a dramatically higher rate than social media, and what it actually looks like to build infrastructure instead of just feeding a machine. If your business relies on Instagram, TikTok, or any one platform to keep money coming in, this episode is not theoretical. It is diagnostic. Episode Timeline 00:00 Welcome to Brand Crimes 00:28 The Platform Rent Trap 02:22 Exhibit A Creator Economy Stats 03:50 Reach Collapse Reality Check 05:40 Exhibit B How Platforms Engineered It 06:00 Four Phases of Algorithm Control 09:37 Exhibit C Real Business Casualties 12:35 Exhibit D Psychology of Dependency 13:02 Dopamine Loop and Success Theater 15:51 Exhibit E Owned Media Revolution 16:14 Substack Exodus and Ownership 17:27 Membership and Multiple Income Streams 17:47 Exit Plans and Email Math 19:12 Why Email Beats Algorithms 19:42 Infrastructure Playbook Steps 1-3 22:20 Lead Magnets That Work 23:34 Bridge Emails and Trust 24:49 Nurture Then Monetize 26:18 Use Social Strategically 26:58 Danger Check Questions 28:30 Counterarguments Debunked 30:41 Verdict and Action Steps 32:57 Final Reality Check and Wrap

19 Mar 2026 - 34 min
episode Stanley’s Quencher Trap: When Viral Product Hype Becomes a Brand Liability artwork

Stanley’s Quencher Trap: When Viral Product Hype Becomes a Brand Liability

In this case file of Brand Crimes & Other Offenses, Sasha Monique examines Stanley’s Quencher phenomenon and the strategic risk that appears when viral product success is mistaken for brand strength. Stanley, founded in 1913 as a durable thermos brand, experienced a massive resurgence after the Quencher tumbler gained traction through The Buy Guide’s audience and a women-focused relaunch. The moment accelerated in 2023 when a viral TikTok showed a Stanley Cup surviving a car fire with ice still inside. Stanley’s decision to replace the owner’s vehicle turned the clip into a cultural event and sent demand into overdrive. But beneath the hype is a structural problem. Stanley’s growth now relies heavily on one product family, supported by endless color variations and limited drops that create manufactured scarcity. Instead of expanding the brand’s identity, the strategy has trained customers to collect multiple versions of the same item. This episode looks beyond the comeback story to analyze the risks of building a brand around a single viral product. Sasha breaks down how scarcity marketing can become dependency, how overconsumption conflicts with sustainability messaging, and why brands that confuse product momentum with brand equity often struggle once the trend cools. The verdict: Stanley didn’t just create demand for a cup. They created a system that must constantly feed the hype. When the trend slows, the real question becomes whether the brand has anything stronger to stand on. Episode Timeline 00:00 Welcome to Brand Crimes 00:28 The Stanley car fire moment 01:09 Opening the Stanley case file 02:08 Exhibit A: The Quencher comeback 04:14 Exhibit B: The viral car fire moment 06:29 Exhibit C: The one-product risk 07:58 Exhibit D: The color drop strategy 09:30 Exhibit E: Overconsumption backlash 11:25 Exhibit F: Scarcity dependency 13:13 Exhibit G: The missing evolution plan 15:14 Verdict and lessons 17:18 Closing

12 Mar 2026 - 17 min
episode Brand Identity: How to Tell If Yours Is Working artwork

Brand Identity: How to Tell If Yours Is Working

In this episode of Brand Crimes & Other Offenses, Sasha Monique opens a different kind of case file. Instead of dissecting a single brand crime, this episode acts as a forensics report: a rapid-fire Q&A covering the strategic mistakes founders make around brand identity, brand messaging, content strategy, and premium positioning. Sasha explains how to diagnose whether your identity is attracting the right people (not just attention), why most founders misuse their personal story inside the brand, and why “no engagement” is almost always a strategy problem, not an algorithm problem. She also breaks down how to attract higher-quality leads through mirrored language and deliberate outreach, why your investment order should always be brand strategy → website → marketing, and how a well-designed inquiry process can quietly repel bad-fit clients before they ever reach your inbox. Then the conversation moves into the difference between a brand refresh and a rebrand, why most founders spread themselves across too many platforms, and the real definition of premium positioning. The episode closes with one of Sasha’s core philosophies: if you want to escape competition entirely, stop optimizing inside someone else’s market and start building category ownership. Because the brands that win long-term don’t fight harder in crowded spaces, they create new ones. Episode Timeline 00:00 Show Intro 01:49 Is Your Brand Identity Working? 04:37 Founder Story vs Brand Story 07:10 The “No Engagement” Diagnosis 11:29 How to Attract the Right Audience 16:44 What Founders Should Invest in First 21:09 Repelling the Wrong Clients 22:04 Brand Refresh vs Rebrand 27:08 Choosing Sustainable Platforms 28:54 Filtering Conflicting Advice 30:20 Premium Positioning Explained 31:12 Loved But Not Buying 31:54 Category Ownership Strategy

5 Mar 2026 - 35 min
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