Let me set the scene. In a few days, the world stops working and starts watching. The 2026 FIFA World Cup kicks off across North America — and Miami, my city, the place I built this studio, is right in the middle of it. Hard Rock Stadium (rebranded Miami Stadium for the tournament) is hosting seven matches, including a quarterfinal and the third-place playoff on July 18.
Seven matches. Brazil. Colombia. Portugal. Uruguay. Some of the biggest names in the sport, playing 25 minutes from my front door. Most people are thinking about that as a sports story. I'm thinking about it as a production story.
When somewhere between 600,000 and a million visitors pour into South Florida over a few weeks, they don't just bring suitcases and jerseys. They bring cameras, content budgets, brand activations, and an audience the size of a planet. And somebody has to shoot all of it.
THIS ISN'T A TOURISM STORY. IT'S A CONTENT STORY.
Everybody's quoting the economic numbers right now, and they're staggering. But here's the part most people miss: every one of those dollars gets sold with video.
- The hotel that wants to fill rooms in July is cutting a reel right now.
- The restaurant on Brickell launching a World Cup menu needs a sizzle video for Instagram.
- The sports brand activating a fan zone needs same-day recap content before the crowd even goes home.
- The fintech sponsor flying executives into town needs interviews, B-roll, and a highlight film for the investors who weren't in the room.
A global event doesn't just attract spectators. It attracts stories that have to be captured, cut, and pushed across every platform at once — and that demand lands directly on South Florida's production community.
GETS SOLD WITH VIDEO.
WHY MIAMI WAS BUILT FOR THIS MOMENT
I've watched this city's creative economy grow up over the last five years, and I'll say it plainly: there have never been more production companies, agencies, and content creators operating here than there are right now. The talent pool is deep. The light is unreal. And brands you'd expect to only shoot in LA or New York — Nike, Coca-Cola, the NFL, the streamers — have been quietly running productions through South Florida for years.
The World Cup is the moment all of that infrastructure gets stress-tested in front of the world. And it's not a one-summer spike — the tournament is the on-ramp, not the destination. Miami spent the last decade turning itself into a permanent stage. The World Cup is simply the loudest proof yet.
The cameras that show up in June don't all pack up in July. The relationships do, the reels do, the case studies do. They compound.
"A global event doesn't create demand for video. It exposes how much demand was already there — and who's ready to deliver it."
— Jaime AndresWHAT THIS MEANS FOR BRANDS, SPORTS & SOCIAL
The shift I'm seeing isn't subtle. Brands used to produce a campaign. Now they produce a content system — one shoot engineered to become twelve, fifteen, twenty pieces across Reels, Shorts, connected TV, and whatever the algorithm is hungry for that week. The World Cup pours gasoline on that, because the audience is already leaning in. That's the most valuable thing a brand can borrow: attention that's already turned on.
- Speed wins. The team that delivers a recap the night of the match beats the team that delivers a polished film three weeks later. Relevance has a shelf life measured in hours.
- One shoot, every platform. If you're capturing footage in June and only using it once, you're leaving most of the value on the table. Plan the vertical cuts, the long-form, and the stills before you ever hit record.
- Story beats spectacle. A million people are about to film the same stadium and skyline. The work that lands is the work with a point of view — a reason to care beyond "look how big the crowd is."
WATCHING THE WORLD COME TO MY CITY
I came up in this city making things with whatever I had — late nights, plugins, and a lot of stubbornness. Watching Miami become a place where the literal World Cup comes to us, where the world's biggest brands are flying in to tell stories on our streets, still doesn't feel real some days. But I've learned that moments like this reward the prepared, not the lucky. The studios and creators who treat this summer as a deadline to be ready for — clear systems, fast turnarounds, a story-first approach — are the ones who'll still be busy in 2027 because of relationships they built in 2026.
THE WHISTLE'S ABOUT TO BLOW
This is the biggest stage Miami has ever been handed, and it's pointed straight at a camera. The hospitality brands, the sports teams, the sponsors, the local businesses riding the wave — all of them are about to need more video, faster, than they ever have before.
The question isn't whether there's work coming. It's who's ready to shoot it.
READY FOR THE BIGGEST SUMMER MIAMI'S EVER HAD?
At Jaime Andres Media, we build story-first video for brands, sports, and the organizations betting big on South Florida — activations, recaps, brand films, and social content built to move fast. If the World Cup window is on your calendar, let's talk before the city fills up.