Mike's Hard Lemonade and Genesis Motor each built custom Netflix campaigns around the Will Ferrell film *The Hawk*, according to Marketing Dive. The campaigns ran as bespoke content partnerships, not standard pre-roll, marking Netflix's move toward editorially integrated brand placements tied to specific film releases.
Mike's Hard created a branded content series featuring Ferrell in character, distributed as standalone episodes within Netflix's interface. Genesis ran a short-form campaign showcasing its GV70 SUV alongside *The Hawk* premiere, positioned as a companion piece rather than a traditional ad slot. Both brands secured placements that appeared alongside the film's marketing push, not as interrupts.
The mechanism works because Netflix controls the full viewing environment. Unlike YouTube or Hulu, where pre-roll is skippable or ignored, Netflix can gate premium content behind branded sequences the platform frames as part of the experience. The brand pays for production and placement, Netflix provides distribution and contextual relevance. The audience trades attention for access to the tentpole release, and the brand borrows authority from the film's editorial halo. Ferrell's involvement compounds the effect — his character becomes the vehicle for Mike's Hard, collapsing the line between content and endorsement.
For a small physical-product brand, the play is accessible at local scale. Identify a cultural tentpole in your category — a local food festival, a charity 5K, a neighborhood concert series. Approach the organizer with a proposal: you produce a two-minute brand story tied to the event's theme, they distribute it as part of the event's owned media (email, social, ticketing confirmation). You cover production ($500–$1,200 for a local videographer), the organizer embeds it in their content calendar. Example: a candle brand sponsors a local author reading series, produces a 90-second film on how scent triggers memory, the bookstore runs it as an intro to each reading and posts it on Instagram Stories tagged to the event. The brand supplies product for event swag bags, locking distribution. No media buy, just production cost and product seeding. The attendee sees your story as part of the experience, not an interruption.
The broader pattern is platform owners monetizing their editorial context. Netflix tested ad tiers, now tests content partnerships. Spotify runs branded playlists. Substack will monetize writer intros. For physical goods, the equivalent is owned-media partnerships with local curators — the coffee shop, the gym, the bookstore — who control audience attention and will trade placement for content that elevates their program. You produce the asset, they distribute it within their ecosystem, you capture the audience without competing in the open ad market.