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‘Emily in Paris’ spotlights designer looks with product placement

PARIS (AFP) – From Google and Samsung to LVMH, AMI, Jacquemus and even Lidl, brands galore take centre stage in the latest season of Netflix hit series Emily in Paris, outshining its plot and characters.

The United States (US) streaming giant has teamed up with Google to redirect viewers, using its Lens tool, to a website selling every outfit worn by the protagonists simply by photographing the screen.

With clicks spiking, Netflix is cashing in on commissions and a “next-level kind of engagement”, the firm said in a statement.

Emily Cooper, the series’ ditzy American heroine who relocates to Paris from Chicago to work for fictional luxury marketing agency “Savoir”, is conveniently tasked in the show with developing innovative partnerships for real brands.

Such practices are restricted by French law regulating product placement and surreptitious advertising in film and television productions – but that legislation does not apply to streaming content.

“This way of working is new, for us French people, but it is common in American markets where brands are integrated very early on, from scriptwriting, and where advertisers put down significant amounts” of cash, Jean-Dominique Bourgeois, who heads a French agency dedicated to product placement, told AFP.

Bourgois, whose firm Place to Be Media developed the partnership between Emily in Paris and McDonald’s in season three, says companies have budgets ranging from EUR500,000 to EUR1 million for a “scripted placement”.

ABOVE & BELOW: Visitors walk past the restaurant Terra Nera; and a woman poses for photographs on Pont Neuf bridge. PHOTO: AFP
PHOTO: AFP
Visitors take a selfie in Jardin du Palais Royal. PHOTO: AFP
ABOVE & BELOW: Photos show visitors in jardin du Palais Royal; the French Impressionist painter Claude Monet’s gardens (Jardins de Claude Monet) in Giverny; and the Place Valois. PHOTO: AFP
PHOTO: AFP
PHOTO: AFP

“It’s a good deal for brands that would spend a lot more for a multi-country campaign,” he said.

Second-hand designer clothing platform Vestiaire Collective paid for a few minutes of fame when Emily’s best friend Mindy – supposedly broke – sold pieces from her designer wardrobe in a detailed scene.

The French company, contacted by AFP, did not reveal the cost of the deal but said it aimed to boost its brand’s reputation, targeting growth in the US, which makes up 20 per cent of its sales. The fashion firm, which offers 900 reference pieces inspired by Emily’s wardrobe, has recorded an increase in new clients, sellers and buyers.

Emily’s ever-more extravagant looks across four seasons are nevertheless high-selling hits.

Memorable clothes include a passe Kangol bucket hat in the first season, a plethora of bright yellow looks and berets in the second season, as well as a masquerade ball striped suit and Mindy’s fuzzy blue hat in season four.

The programme’s costume designer Marilyn Fitoussi, who said she makes “eyes bleed” with her bold fashion choices, has turned Emily’s wardrobe into a character in its own right.

“I am often called up by brands whose visibility has slightly declined or that are looking to reach different, younger customers,” Fitoussi told French financial newspaper Les Echos.

The designer pointed out that the first season’s limited budget meant she had to dress the protagonist only in second-hand and vintage clothing.

“I don’t get paid by brands and I don’t want to be,” she said.

Since then, fashion magazines have picked apart each and every attire as they would a runway show – with every branded scene, displaying a Louis Vuitton belt or Emily’s running gear, carefully shot.

“Watching the series gives you the troubling impression of wandering around a massive mall,” GQ journalist Adam Sanchez told AFP.

The culture and cinema reporter says the practice “has amped up insanely” in the most recent season, with four product placements in the first four minutes of episode one.

But viewers know what to expect, Sanchez said – and they are asking for more.

“It is a particular kind of viewing experience,” he said.

“They don’t really come for the plot, which is minimal, as much as for what Emily is wearing and consuming.”

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