Mike's Hard Lemonade placed product inside a Netflix scripted feature called *The Hawk* through a custom brand partnership, according to Marketing Dive. The deal skipped traditional pre-roll or banner inventory entirely. Instead, the brand became part of the show's narrative environment — the can appeared in scenes, the product lived in the characters' hands, and the brand folded into the streaming experience without interrupting it.
The move reflects a broader shift at Netflix, which now offers bespoke integration deals for brands willing to co-create around a specific series or film rather than buy standard ad units. Mike's Hard paid for access to the show's creative team, script consultation, and on-screen presence tied to the story's setting and tone. The brand did not disclose the deal size, but Marketing Dive noted the partnership represents a new class of Netflix offering designed for physical products that can plausibly exist in a character's world.
Why this worked: streaming viewers skip ads, but they watch stories. When a product appears as part of a scene — not as an interruption — the brain processes it as environmental detail rather than commercial intrusion. Mike's Hard gained minutes of screen time in a high-production context, distributed to Netflix's 260 million global subscribers without triggering the mental filter that standard ads activate. The brand also inherited the show's audience sentiment: if viewers liked *The Hawk*, the product that lived inside that world gained passive endorsement.
The mechanic scales down. A small physical-product brand cannot afford a Netflix partnership, but the principle — embedding product in content people choose to watch — works at every budget level. The play is to find a creator, podcast, YouTube series, or Substack with an audience that matches your customer, then offer product as a story element instead of asking for a mention. You send the item, you brief the creator on how it fits their format, and you let them decide whether to feature it in a way that serves their narrative. If the product is interesting and the creator sees utility, it appears. If not, you move to the next one.
For a solo founder, this means identifying 10 YouTube creators or podcasters whose audience overlaps with your buyer, sending each a sample with a one-paragraph brief explaining why the product fits their content world, and offering no payment — just the product and the option to feature it if it makes sense. Cost: product plus shipping, typically under $200 for ten attempts. For a marketer with budget, the move is to hire a product-placement agency that books integration deals with mid-tier streaming shows, YouTube Originals, or branded podcasts, budgeting $15,000 to $50,000 for a single quarter of placements. For a procurement buyer, the question is whether your product can live inside a corporate event video, a partner's content series, or a customer success story — turning internal content into distribution without buying media.
The broader pattern: physical products that exist in real life can exist in fictional life, and the line between the two is now negotiable. Mike's Hard proved the deal structure works at the top of the market. The rest is finding your version of *The Hawk* and making the same offer at your scale.
The takeaway
Mike's Hard skipped Netflix ads and embedded product in a scripted show's story world — a move any brand can replicate with creators at their budget level.
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