Mike's Hard Lemonade and Genesis each built custom Netflix campaigns around the release of *The Hawk*, a sports drama starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt, according to Marketing Dive. Both brands invested six figures apiece to create co-branded creative that ran alongside the film rather than inserting themselves into standard ad inventory. The campaigns went live when the film premiered and ran for a limited window, using Netflix's audience data to target viewers who matched each brand's profile. Marketing Dive reports that Netflix is actively pitching these bespoke partnerships as an alternative to programmatic pre-roll, allowing brands to tie marketing directly to a single piece of content.
Each brand built distinct creative. Mike's Hard produced a series of short-form spots featuring backyard baseball scenes that mirrored the film's tone, positioning the product as the drink for casual sports watching. Genesis created a longer-form piece highlighting the vehicle's design alongside the film's visual aesthetic, emphasizing the car as a choice for people who care about craft. Neither brand appeared inside the film itself. Instead, Netflix surfaced the campaigns to targeted users before they started the movie, presenting the ads as part of the event experience rather than interrupting it. The platform provided performance data on completion rates and audience overlap but did not disclose view counts or direct attribution metrics.
The mechanism works because it collapses three decisions into one buying moment. The viewer chooses the film, sees brand creative that shares its sensibility, and perceives the ad as part of the event rather than an intrusion. Netflix controls the timing and the audience segment, so the brand avoids wastage on unmatched viewers. The six-figure spend buys both production and placement, meaning the brand is paying for creative labor as much as media. The result is a campaign that feels less like an ad buy and more like event sponsorship, which changes how the viewer processes the message.
A physical-product brand with a $15,000 budget can run a simplified version by partnering with a podcast or YouTube channel tied to a specific release event. Identify a creator who is covering a film, book, or product launch that shares your customer profile. Offer to sponsor a single episode or video tied to that release, and produce 60 seconds of custom creative that mirrors the tone of the content. Pay $2,000 for creative production, $8,000 for the sponsorship slot, and $5,000 for a week of paid social pushing the sponsored episode to the creator's lookalike audience. The creator reads a scripted intro that positions your product as the companion to the event, and you supply a discount code that tracks conversions. The total spend is contained, the audience is pre-matched, and the brand message is wrapped in the event rather than interrupting it.
The broader shift is toward content-tied media buys rather than demographic segments. Brands are paying to attach themselves to a moment instead of a profile, betting that context beats targeting.