Brooklyn Beckham has come under fire this week after taking a swipe at his parents in an Instagram advert for DoorDash. The nepo baby, 27, collaborated with the food delivery firm for the sponsored video, in which he smirks and says: 'You're probably wondering why I'm watching the FIFA World Cup 2026 from home... It's a long story.'It has been taken as mocking his parents, with whom he no longer speaks, while friends of the Beckhams have said David and Victoria are 'devastated and inconsolable' by the jibe. Brooklyn's post hasn't gone down well with the public, who have accused him of cashing in on his family feud and that in doing so he contradicts his January post denouncing his parents, in which he hit out at 'Brand Beckham'. In the scathing six-page statement, Brooklyn accused his family of valuing 'public promotion and endorsements above all else', claiming his parents were 'performative'.Yet while he may have been quick to point the figure at his parents, Brooklyn also has a lengthy history of using 'Brand Beckham' to land work. All the times hypocrite Brooklyn Beckham has cashed in on his family name - from flogging his hot sauce to booking photography jobs - after using feud to land new DoorDash advert In 2024, Brooklyn claimed that he was ready to stand on his own two feet as he promoted his new upcoming hot sauce range, Cloud 23 (pictured with his parents and wife Nicola Peltz)In 2024, Brooklyn claimed that he was ready to stand on his own two feet as he promoted his new upcoming hot sauce range, Cloud 23. He explained that the name was inspired by No 23 shirt which David Beckham wore at Real Madrid and LA Galaxy, as well as June 23, the date he proposed to Nicola Peltz.Yet he insisted that when the hot sauce was released, the public would begin to see him in his own right. He told InStyle: 'Obviously, I've been so fortunate to get these opportunities where [my last name] does help. But when it comes out in September, I think people are going to be like, "wow."'Asked what he thought about his nepo baby label, Brooklyn added: 'I mean, I can't help how I was born. I couldn't ask for better parents and I'm just trying to work my a** off and trying to make a name for myself. That's all I can say, really.'Yet despite his comments, it wasn't long before Brooklyn namedropped his parents to flog the hot sauce. Last February, Brooklyn mentioned his dad no less than three times in an advert for Whole Foods that was filmed ahead of the Super Bowl. In the skit, Brooklyn said that American football wasn't 'proper football', and that he was going to call his dad to 'set it straight'. While cooking with his Cloud 23 sauce, Brooklyn then asked if the camera operator could locate his phone is to see if his dad had called, before explaining that he grew up with football.The advert ended with Brooklyn's phone ringing and him having a chat with his 'dad'. Brooklyn discovered his love of cooking in lockdown and after sharing a video Instagram videos of his meals, he filmed social media series, Cookin’ With Brooklyn. The show, which aired on Facebook Messenger and Instagram, was mercilessly mocked as it was revealed a crew of 62 professionals - including a 'culinary producer' - had been assembled for the show, in which he made a sandwich and needed help cooking a hashbrown. It was produced by influencer content company Wheelhouse DNA at a staggering cost of $100,000 per episode, with TV execs telling The Post the budget and scale was 'unheard of'. Brooklyn made a point of mentioning his family in every episode, such as telling Nobu restaurateur Nobu Matsuhisa: 'I came here with my dad when I was 13'. A source told Page Six that the Beckhams' family friend Gordon Ramsay had advised to them to put as much money into it as they could. Last February, Brooklyn mentioned his dad no less than three times in an advert for Whole Foods that was filmed ahead of the Super Bowl In the skit, that promoted his Cloud 23 sauce, Brooklyn said that American football wasn't 'proper football', and that he was going to call his dad to 'set it straight' Brooklyn also filmed social media series, Cookin’ With Brooklyn at a eeported cost of $100k an episode. He made a point of mentioning his family in every episode (pictured with Romeo) Before turning his hand to cooking, Brooklyn looked into photography. At the age of 16, despite having no professional experience, Brooklyn was picked to shoot a Burberry fragrance campaign - sparking a wave of backlash. Fashion photographer Chris Floyd told the Guardian that Burberry’s decision to employ Brooklyn was a 'devaluation of photography' and that Brooklyn's employment 'goes against everything his parents represent'.Chris said: 'David and Victoria Beckham represent sheer willpower and graft. Especially her, she’s climbed that mountain all by herself. 'They represent hard work and then their 16-year-old year son comes along and it’s sheer nepotism. He hasn’t done it from hard work, which is counter-intuitive to what his parents represent.'Meanwhile, fashion photographer Jon Gorrigan said he expected Burberry would have the entire setup ready so that all Brooklyn had to do was click the button.Jon mused: 'He’s obviously not going to be doing the lighting, he’ll have no clue of the programmes, the cameras or Photoshop. 'It’s going to be so well managed – he’ll have the best hair and makeup, the best models, the very best equipment, so that the chance of any risk is greatly reduced.'It infuriates me because I learned my trade and other photographers learn their trade but he’s not learning his trade. I can understand why they’re doing it, getting the younger generation interested in Burberry. It definitely annoys me. Names sell, don’t they?' Burberry chief creative Christopher Bailey defended the decision to hire Brooklyn saying 'his style and attitude were exactly what we wanted to capture the spirit of this new fragrance campaign.'While the campaign came out well, Brooklyn infuriated the photography community again when he released his notorious What I See book in 2017, sharing captures of his life and family.Aged 18, he was criticised for including blurry, shadowy images of elephants in Kenya, which he said were 'so hard to photograph.'On the next page, next to a blurry shot of a crowd at a restaurant, the caption said: 'Dinner. I like this picture - it's out of focus but you can tell there's a lot going on.'The book contained 300 images and was launched with an exhibition in London and Los Angeles. Brooklyn was subject to widespread mockery when the book was released, with critics noting that it would be highly unusual for an 18-year-old amateur photographer to be offered a book deal by a major publisher without his level of fame and connections That same year, Brooklyn began a four-year photography course at Parsons School of Design in New York, but he dropped out after a year. Brooklyn infuriated the photography community again when he released his notorious What I See book in 2017, sharing captures of his life and family Now, Brooklyn is said to be relying on his father-in-law Nelson Peltz's connections to help him open a burger restaurant in the States. A source told The Sun: 'Brooklyn has long dreamed of opening a restaurant where he lives and that is finally coming to fruition. 'He has created Beck's Buns and quietly launched it on social media. Brooklyn's company Buster Sauce Inc owns the trademark and he is planning to open a restaurant.'Yet he couldn't resist dragging his famous parents into his latest venture - the collaboration for DoorDash - which ends with 'more soon', suggesting another similar advert will follow.The video sparked a backlash with comments now limited for some Instagram users. One fan told Brooklyn: 'If you hate them so much drop the name and stop profiting from association.'The Daily Mail revealed that friends of the Beckhams have been taken aback by the latest shocking move amid their public family feud, which has left the family devastated.A friend of the Beckhams told Katie Hind: 'To do an advert based on estrangement from family as if it’s a joke when his family is devastated and his sister and grandparents are inconsolable is shocking.'Especially from someone who claims he wants peace and privacy.'The Beckhams have been embroiled in an increasingly acrimonious dispute with Brooklyn and Nicola for months, with relations said to have deteriorated dramatically after the couple failed to attend David's 50th birthday celebrations in May 2025.In January, Brooklyn released a scathing six-page statement (below) announcing he had cut ties with his family – declaring he was no longer part of 'Brand Beckham' and insisting his parents and their other children are 'performative'.Shortly before Christmas last year, Brooklyn blocked his parents on Instagram, while Brooklyn and Nicola's lawyers later wrote to the Beckhams' legal team requesting that all communication be conducted through legal representatives.Brooklyn also claimed David and Victoria had controlled him for much of his life, attempted to drive a wedge between him and Nicola and left him embarrassed when his mother danced 'inappropriately' with him during the first dance at his wedding.The aspiring chef was last pictured with his family during Christmas 2024, and by May 2025 it was clear a feud had formed after Brooklyn failed to acknowledge either of his parents' birthdays and snubbed David's 50th. Brooklyn Beckham's statement in full I have been silent for years and made every effort to keep these matters private. Unfortunately, my parents and their team have continued to go to the press, leaving me with no choice but to speak for myself and tell the truth about only some of the lies that have been printed.I do not want to reconcile with my family. I'm not being controlled, I'm standing up for myself for the first time in my life. For my entire life, my parents have controlled narratives in the press about our family. The performative social media posts, family events and inauthentic relationships have been a fixture of the life I was born into.Recently, I have seen with my own eyes the lengths that they'll go through to place countless lies in the media, mostly at the expense of innocent people, to preserve their own facade. But I believe the truth always comes out.My parents have been trying endlessly to ruin my relationship since before my wedding, and it hasn't stopped. My mum cancelled making Nicola's dress in the eleventh hour despite how excited she was to wear her design, forcing her to urgently find a new dress. Weeks before our big day, my parents repeatedly pressured and attempted to bribe me into signing away the rights to my name, which would have affected me, my wife, and our future children.They were adamant on me signing before my wedding date because then the terms of the deal would be initiated. My holdout affected the payday, and they have never treated me the same since. During the wedding planning, my mum went so far as to call me "evil" because Nicola and I chose to include my Nanny Sandra, and Nicola's Naunni at our table, because they both didn't have their husbands. Both of our parents had their own tables equally adjacent to ours.The night before our wedding, members of my family told me that Nicola was "not blood" and "not family." Since the moment I started standing up for myself with my family, I've received endless attacks from my parents, both privately and publicly, that were sent to the press on their orders.Even my brothers were sent to attack me on social media, before they ultimately blocked me out of nowhere this last Summer. My mum hijacked my first dance with my wife, which had been planned weeks in advance to a romantic love song. In front of our 500 wedding guests, Marc Anthony called me to the stage, where in the schedule was planned to be my romantic dance with my wife but instead my mum was waiting to dance with me instead. She danced very inappropriately on me in front of everyone. I've never felt more uncomfortable or humiliated in my entire life. We wanted to renew our vows so we could create new memories of our wedding day that bring us joy and happiness, not anxiety and embarrassment.My wife has been consistently disrespected by my family, no matter how hard we've tried to come together as one. My mum has repeatedly invited women from my past into our lives in ways that were clearly intended to make us both uncomfortable.Despite this, we still travelled to London for my dad's birthday and were rejected for a week as we waited in our hotel room trying to plan quality time with him. He refused all of our attempts, unless it was at his big birthday party with a hundred guests and cameras at every corner.When he finally agreed to see me, it was under the condition that Nicola wasn't invited. It was a slap in the face. Later, when my family travelled to LA, they refused to see me at all.My family values public promotion and endorsements above all else. Brand Beckham comes first. Family "love" is decided by how much you post on social media, or how quickly you drop everything to show up and pose for a family photo opp, even if it's at the expense of our professional obligations.We've gone out of our way for years to show up and support at every fashion show, every party, and every press activity to show 'our perfect family.' But the one time my wife asked for my mum's support to save displaced dogs during the LA fires, my mum refused.The narrative that my wife controls me is completely backwards. I have been controlled by my parents for most of my life. I grew up with overwhelming anxiety. For the first time in my life, since stepping away from my family, that anxiety has disappeared.I wake up every morning grateful for the life I chose, and have found peace and relief. My wife and I do not want a life shaped by image, press, or manipulation. All we want peace, privacy and happiness for us and our future family.
All the times Brooklyn Beckham has cashed in on his family name
While he may have been quick to point the figure at his parents, Brooklyn also has a lengthy history of using 'Brand Beckham' to land work.












