Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

SHOP AT HOME, WITH CELEBS

ONLINE E- COMMERCE PLATFORM TALKSHOPLI­VE IS A NATURAL FIT FOR ENTERTAINE­RS LIKE MEGHAN TRAINOR AND GARTH BROOKS.

- B Y K H A N H T. L . T R A N

O“We like to star in everything, don’t we?” she said. “So let’s star in this autographe­d picture of this book.”

During the pandemic, Parton, Brooks and Trainor have managed to sell their tomes and music directly to fans, thanks to channels streamed on phones, tablets and computers by Talkshopli­ve. Unlike previous decades when an actor or singer might have been ridiculed for peddling products on TV (remember Cher selling shampoo in the early 1990s?), celebritie­s today can sidestep the stigma of starring in their own infomercia­l.

Since launching in 2018, L.A.-based Talkshopli­ve has been lifted not just by word of mouth and relationsh­ips cultivated with performers, managers, agents and publicists but also by deals with publishing houses and ReaderLink, a major book distributo­r that reaches retailers such as Target and Walmart. Talkshopli­ve has attracted Alicia Keys, Julie Andrews, Kobe Bryant, Bella Thorne and brands ranging from Fred Segal and Jane Seymourend­orsed Crépe Erase to iHeartRadi­o and St. Jude.

The platform blends the on-air showmanshi­p establishe­d by TV shopping networks decades ago with the influencer economy of the moment buoyed by social media. The A-listers don’t have to leave their mansions.

With pandemic-related cancellati­ons of concerts, readings and other gatherings where fans can be close to favorite celebs, livestream shopping is gaining momentum as a pragmatic tool and a communal activity.

“If we didn’t have COVID,” said actor-author Matthew McConaughe­y in the Nov. 23 premiere of his 87-minute Talkshopli­ve presentati­on, “I was going to do shows on the road and tell stories from the book. Anyway, I hope to maybe do that in some form later on in life.”

From a sparsely decorated room in his Austin home, the “Dallas Buyers Club” actor plugged $18.99 copies of his memoir, “Greenlight­s,” along with bundles of hats, T-shirts, hoodies and koozies, priced between $40.50 and $59. “This discussion is zero filters,” he said.

TN T H E D AY before Halloween this year, singer Meghan Trainor disguised herself as Cindy Lou Who from “How the Grinch Stole Christmas” to hype her holiday album, “A Very Trainor Christmas,” during a livestream show with e-commerce startup Talkshopli­ve. ¶ “I look like a grandma,” Trainor said from her home in L.A., suppressin­g a giggle before waving her hands to the banging bass from one of her Santa songs. ¶ Four days earlier, Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood drew more than 3 million viewers on a Talkshopli­ve livestream as the couple sang a cover of Lady Gaga’s hit song “Shallow” from Brooks’ newest album, “Fun.” ¶ And there was music legend Dolly Parton, who gave her audience exactly what they wanted. “We like a show,” Parton said during the October debut of her Talkshopli­ve shopping channel. ¶ Donning a caramel-colored top with puffy sleeves, Parton whipped out a pen to sign a copy of her latest book, “Dolly Parton, Songteller: My Life in Lyrics,” and draw a star and lips during the broadcast from her office in Nashville.

O N Y D ’ O N O F R I O , chief executive of retail consultanc­y TD Insights, said, “The society where we are in, video is really the center of everything.” In particular, he said, the pandemic has “accelerate­d trends that are already underway. E-commerce has been accelerate­d by five to 10 years. Livestream­ing is a variation of e-commerce. It’s a way to do e-commerce with entertainm­ent.”

In short, he said, “It’s a fun way to shop.”

For Brooks, being one of the first household names to test Talkshopli­ve in the U.S. “just made sense,” he wrote in an email to The Times. “It is every artist’s dream to be in one spot, have the audience come to you, inform them so they can make the best decision for themselves and, if they choose to buy, fulfill their requests right then and there. No waiting. Brilliant. This way you know the people who take care of you, as an artist, are being taken care of as a customer.”

After his backup singer, Karyn Rochelle, and Yearwood sold out their albums and mugs, respective­ly, on Talkshopli­ve, Brooks launched his own sales effort in November 2018 for his book “The Anthology Part III: Live.” Encouraged by the numbers, he returned for another show to promote the book.

Between February and April 2019, Brooks hosted four preorder events to sell 1 million copies of his vinyl record called “Legacy,” according to Talkshopli­ve. His hourlong show on Oct. 26 set a record for the number of viewers on

a single Talkshopli­ve show, drumming up 80 times the number of viewers from his initial appearance­s.

“An artist should never be put in the position of hawking their own product, so just talk to the people,” Brooks said of his livestream­ing experience. “Be sincere about what you like about what you are doing, and [followers] will do what makes them happy.”

To help newbies have a lively show and ring up sales, Talkshopli­ve sends tips to sellers, said Bryan Moore, who cofounded the 17-employee company with his sister, Tina Moore. In previous jobs, the siblings had spearheade­d social media campaigns for Brooks and Yearwood as well as for “Entertainm­ent Tonight,” the United Nations and the British Academy of Film and Television Arts. Bryan Moore estimated the number of Talkshopli­ve sellers and channels is 10 times bigger this year than last year.

IN S T E A D O F charging a fee to use its platform, Talkshopli­ve takes a percentage of sales. Moore declined to release sellers’ figures. As proof of increasing interest, he said Talkshopli­ve’s book sales increased eightfold in the last six months and that McConaughe­y and Parton plan to return for more shows. Still, the landscape for livestream commerce in the U.S. is uncharted and fragmented. On one end are emerging startups such as Talkshopli­ve and Foot Locker-backed Ntwrk. On the other, e-commerce giant Amazon is enabling sellers to market nail art kits, virtual reality goggles and more through its interactiv­e shopping service, Amazon Live.

Having studied Chinese for 13 years, Moore is tracking the retail scene in China, where livestream shopping is becoming the norm led by categories such as apparel, cosmetics and food. The trade group Interactiv­e Advertisin­g Bureau projected that global livestream-generated sales will double to $120 billion this year.

Talkshopli­ve aims to increase adoption in the U.S. by answering one question: “How can I make the easiest experience for people who come here and want to buy my product?” Moore said.

Sellers can access Talkshopli­ve’s tech platform on any device via its app or website. They also can use broadcasti­ng software for a profession­al production or patch in with costars through video call. The sale is executed within the video player, which can be embedded on any site. Each seller is responsibl­e for fulfilling and shipping individual orders.

Buyers don’t need to log in to Talkshopli­ve before making a purchase. However, if fans follow a celebrity on Talkshopli­ve, they’re notified when the entertaine­r goes live. The shows can be watched long after the stars have logged off. A month after Parton’s premiere, fans continued to leave comments such as, “We love you,” on the archive.

“It’s not just about the sale,” Moore said. “We’re saying we are the vehicle to provide the greatest experience for your fans, your customers, whoever that might be.”

Although a Talkshopli­ve broadcast goes largely one way, with audience engagement limited to real-time comments, celebritie­s can respond to questions from the chat box during the livestream. The seasoned performers know what to do even when they can’t see the fans.

“The beauty about getting to be an entertaine­r this long is you don’t have to imagine the faces,” Brooks said. “You just close your eyes and remember the faces ... all of them ... and the joy immediatel­y hits you as an artist.”

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 ??  ?? TRISHA YEARWOOD, clockwise from top left, Garth Brooks, Matthew McConaughe­y, Justin Trainor, Meghan Trainor and Daryl Sabara on Talkshopli­ve.
TRISHA YEARWOOD, clockwise from top left, Garth Brooks, Matthew McConaughe­y, Justin Trainor, Meghan Trainor and Daryl Sabara on Talkshopli­ve.
 ?? Photog raphs from Talkshopli­ve ??
Photog raphs from Talkshopli­ve

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