Prego, the Campbell's Company pasta sauce brand, is launching a dinner-table conversation recording device called the "Connection Keeper." It was designed in partnership with StoryCorps, the nonprofit known for preserving American stories at the Library of Congress.
A pasta sauce company selling a microphone is absurd on its face, but that is the point of the campaign.
The Product
The Connection Keeper Bundle launches April 27, 2026, for $20, with a limited run of 100 units. Each bundle pairs the recorder with the brand's core grocery product plus a set of prompts.
What is in the box:
- A jar of Prego sauce.
- The Connection Keeper recording device.
- An instruction manual.
- A pack of conversation prompt cards.
The device itself is intentionally low-tech. There are no screens, no AI, no Wi-Fi, and no Bluetooth, just a single button to record and a USB-C cord to upload audio to another device.
The Positioning
StoryCorps is billing the Connection Keeper as a "simple, screen-free conversation recorder" for the average American family. The marketing message is clear: in a world of AI-powered everything, sit down and have a real conversation.
Leveraging StoryCorps brings real brand heritage too, since StoryCorps-recorded stories are preserved at the Library of Congress. That partnership adds weight to what would otherwise be a gimmick.
The Backlash and the Upside
Some social media users flagged privacy concerns, since a recording device on the dinner table is a new thing to explain to guests even without an internet connection. Others praised the anti-AI, anti-surveillance framing as a smart cultural read.
For Prego, the math is simple. A limited run of 100 units is not a product strategy, it is a marketing campaign, and the brand wants attention in a grocery category that rarely gets any.
The Campbell's Playbook
Campbell's has been leaning on heritage brand moments to re-engage older shoppers while still chasing younger ones, and the Prego stunt fits that pattern. It follows similar nostalgia-focused campaigns from other packaged goods giants trying to keep shelf space in a DTC-heavy grocery market.
The bet is that a talked-about $20 item creates enough earned media to move an ordinary $4 jar of sauce. That kind of conversion is hard to measure precisely, which is exactly why these campaigns keep coming.
What to Watch
Consumer brands are testing "human-first" messaging as a counterweight to the AI surge, and pasta sauce plus a microphone is the strangest example yet. Expect more brands to try the same angle in 2026, some with products, some with ad campaigns, most of them aiming to feel more like a family dinner and less like an algorithm.
Whether any of it sells more pasta sauce is the open question.
