Mike's Hard Lemonade and Genesis Motor North America built custom placements inside Netflix's *The Hawk* — a Will Ferrell comedy — instead of buying standard streaming ad inventory, according to Marketing Dive. The brands worked directly with Netflix's creative studio to place product into narrative scenes, securing exposure to the platform's 282 million global subscribers without triggering the skip reflex that accompanies traditional pre-roll.
Mike's Hard created a fictional malt beverage brand called "Golden Eagle Malt Liquor" that appears as a plot device in the film. Genesis placed vehicles on-screen in driving sequences and background shots. Both deals required upfront coordination with the production team, embedding brand presence during filming rather than adding it in post-production or through separate ad slots. Netflix confirmed the partnerships were part of its growing branded entertainment practice, which it launched to monetize subscriber attention without increasing interruptive ad load.
The mechanism works because integrated placement sits inside content the viewer chose to watch. Standard streaming ads — even targeted ones — are consumption interruptions. A brand inside the narrative borrows the viewer's existing intent. The format also survives skipping behavior and ad-blocker evasion, two persistent erosion factors for traditional digital video buys. Netflix's ad-supported tier, launched in late 2022, now reaches 70 million monthly active users globally, but bespoke placement reaches the full subscriber base, including premium tiers where no standard ads run.
The risk is creative control. Netflix retains final editorial authority, and the brand must accept how the placement appears in context. Mike's Hard built a fictional brand rather than placing its own label, accepting narrative fit over direct product recognition. Genesis gained vehicle screen time but not close-up logo shots. The trade is higher creative risk for lower audience resistance. Brands accustomed to controlling every frame of a thirty-second spot must instead trust the production team to preserve brand value inside a story they do not own.
A small physical-product brand replicates the play on YouTube creator partnerships, not Netflix originals. Identify a creator whose audience matches your customer and whose content naturally accommodates your product — cooking channels for kitchenware, car-build series for garage tools, unboxing shows for gift items. Offer to send product at no charge in exchange for organic inclusion in an upcoming video. Write a two-sentence pitch: "We make [product]. If it fits an upcoming episode, we'll send one at no cost. No script approval, no required talking points." The creator controls the narrative; you gain placement inside content their audience already trusts. Budget: product cost plus shipping, typically under $100 per placement. Track using a unique discount code or landing page mentioned in the video description. Start with creators in the 10,000 to 100,000 subscriber range where inbound product offers are still rare and response rates are higher.
The broader pattern is substitution: move budget from media inventory to content collaboration. Ads ask for attention. Placements borrow it. Netflix's model scales this to feature films. A one-person brand scales it to a niche creator's weekly upload. Both strip out the friction of interruption and place the product inside a viewing session the audience initiated. The next move is mapping which creators already serve your customer and testing outreach at low cost before committing to paid integrations.