Legendary heavyweight boxer Mike Tyson once remarked that “everybody has a plan until they get punched in the mouth.” The observation captured his raw-but-wry sense of humor—and also his experience. Over a 20-year career featuring 58 professional bouts, Tyson’s been punched in the face. A lot.
In addition to needing a good physician, Tyson surely could use a good moisturizing bar. And he’s found one. In one of the quirkier brand-athlete partnerships—even for a brand that’s known for doing quirky things—“Iron Mike” is fronting the debut of Dr. Squatch’s Total Moisture Collection in a campaign that debuts today.
“Working on this new product collection, we started to think about [who could] help kick this thing off and educate the audience in a fun, irreverent way,” Dr. Squatch’s senior VP of marketing John Ludeke told ADWEEK. “Mike Tyson came up. We reached out to his team, and that was it.”
In the first of a pair of spots (the second will drop on March 31), the 58-year-old bruiser swaggers toward the camera and announces, “since switching to Dr. Squatch, everyone’s calling me Moisture Mike.”
Tyson then plays a riff on his signature punch-in-the-mouth remark. “Everyone has a plan,” Tyson rasps, “until they realize they’re showering with synthetic cleaners.” (Dr. Squatch’s principal differentiators include all-natural ingredients and eccentric, limited-time fragrances.)
Even though interest in facial skincare products has been rising steadily—52% of American men now use them, according to 2024 data from Mintel—most of the adopters are in the 18 to 27 crowd. That leaves personal-care brands like Dr. Squatch with the task of turning men of a certain age on to products that some may regard as feminine, unnecessary, or both.
A task like that called for a tough guy like Tyson, said Ludeke, who summed up the logic thus: “If Mike can use it, if it’s good enough for Mike, then maybe it’s good enough for you.”
“The Dr. Squatch brand has always been pretty irreverent and walks a fine line between serving and satirizing American bro culture,” observed Ian Baer, founder and CEO of marketing intelligence firm Sooth. “The Squatch campaign speaks to ‘dudes’ all the way from teens to Gen X. In many ways, it’s like a less corporate version of the work Axe and later Old Spice did very effectively in the early 2000s.”
Tyson’s redemption path
Though Tyson’s willingness to poke fun at his own tough-guy image is much of what animates the spot, it’s also a reminder that Tyson, in his prime, really was a tough guy. And he’s still one with a complicated past.