Day four at Cannes. The hotel breakfast buffet has started recognising people. The rosé is now basically a food group. And somewhere nearby, a senior creative is saying, “No, I’m actually pacing myself,” while holding two espressos and the haunted stare of a man who has watched 83 case films in four days. Today’s winners came from Creative Business Transformation, Creative Effectiveness, Creative Strategy, Luxury, Brand Experience & Activation, Creative Commerce and Innovation - or, as the rest of the world calls them, “the ones where the idea also has to make the finance team unclench slightly.” Let’s take a look at who’s strutted off with the shiny metal jungle cats. Creative Business Transformation Lions Grand Prix: The Wedding Rice Wikifarmer, by McCann Athens Creative Effectiveness Lions Grand Prix: Three Words AXA France, by Publicis Conseil, Paris Creative Strategy Lions Grand Prix: The Pub that Refused to Die Heineken, by LePub, Milan / Publicis Dublin Luxury Lions Grand Prix: Warmer Together Moncler, by WESAYHI, Sliema Brand Experience & Activation Lions Grand Prix: Expedition Impossible Columbia Sportswear, by adam&eve\TBWA, London Creative Commerce Lions Grand Prix: Lucky Fan Index Wisła Kraków Football Club, by VML, Warsaw Innovation Lions Grand Prix: Supernova Adaptive adidas, by TBWA\Canada And that’s Day Four So there we have it. Day four gave us rice with ambition, insurance with emotional uppercuts, a pub that simply refused to shuffle off to the great beer garden in the sky, Moncler making warmth look suspiciously glamorous, Columbia roasting flat-earthers in hiking gear, football fans being more loyal than most exes, and adidas proving innovation doesn’t have to arrive dressed as a robot dog. A strong day, really. Tomorrow brings the final round of Lions, which means the work gets bigger, heavier, worthier, and more likely to make a room full of exhausted ad people nod slowly like they’ve just understood capitalism. Until then… drink water, avoid anyone saying “just one more quick drink,” and never underestimate what rice can do when it gets a decent media budget.