Day five at Cannes. The final day. The lanyards are drooping. The linen has given up. Everyone’s suitcase is 60% dirty laundry, 30% receipts, and 10% mysterious tote bag items they will never use again. The phrase “I’ll email you next week” is being thrown around with the reckless abandon of people who absolutely will not email anyone next week. Today’s final Grand Prix winners came from Glass: The Lion for Change, Sustainable Development Goals, Film, Dan Wieden Titanium Lions and Grand Prix for Good. Cannes Lions announced the final winners on 26 June 2026. Let’s see who got the last big shiny cats before everyone fled to the airport wearing sunglasses and moral superiority. Glass: The Lion for Change Grand Prix: Nigrum Corpus IDOMED & Instituto Yduqs, by Artplan, São Paulo Sustainable Development Goals Lions Grand Prix: Paid Sick Leave for Cows Too Good, by The Partnership Agency, Nairobi Film Lions Grand Prix: Can I Get a Six Pack Quickly? and How Can I Communicate Better with My Mom? Claude, by Mother London Dan Wieden Titanium Lions Grand Prix: Haven Suncorp Insurance, by Leo Australia Grand Prix for Good: 600K Network Comando Con Venezuela, by Rainbow Lobster, Mexico City / Comando Con Venezuela, Caracas And that’s Day Five And just like that, Cannes Lions 2026 is over. Day five gave us medicine getting a long-overdue reality check, cows with better HR than most agencies, Claude roasting the AI gold rush from inside the building, insurance suddenly becoming the main character, and a QR code doing more for democracy than most all-hands meetings. A big finish. A proper finish. The sort of finish that makes everyone say, “That’s what creativity is really for,” before immediately checking whether their flight has lounge access. Across the week, we’ve had frogs, ketchup, tiny coffee shops, chocolate theft, pubs, rice, football fans, flat-earthers, AI jokes, and professionally protected cows. So yes, advertising remains completely normal. Until next year… mute LinkedIn, bin the wristbands, rehydrate your entire personality, and remember: anyone who says “Cannes is really about the conversations” almost certainly did not win anything.