Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Brands reach out in factual film craft

Those who skip ads are targeted

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SAN FRANCISCO — Harbinder Singh was skeptical about arranged marriages. But when he received a photo of his potential wife-to-be, he was wowed. “The charm, the smile, the personalit­y … it shines right there,” he said.

Arvinder, a young woman in her early 20s in India, was also love-struck by Harbinder’s picture. She saw the New Yorker’s kind, loving eyes — a smile that seemed to be directed at her.

A thing as simple as looking at an old-fashioned, physical photograph sparked a whirlwind romance and a lifetime of love — all of it captured in a five-minute documentar­y,

At First Sight, posted online and shown as part of a larger series at the Tribeca Film Festival in April. But it wasn’t just a heartwarmi­ng tale — it was also a subtle pitch for photo printers, with the YouTube version ending with the tagline, “What memories will you print?” followed by “HP keep reinventin­g.”

Since the dawn of TV, entertainm­ent and advertisin­g have been closely intertwine­d. In the 1950s, companies sponsored programs such as The Colgate

Comedy Hour, where it was common to hear pitches for household products before the show and even see them

mentioned in the program’s narratives. But as technology evolved, more consumers fast-forwarded through ads and cut the cord altogether. Brands sought out viral video content that they could sponsor on social media, fueling the growth of companies such as BuzzFeed and Vox. Now, they are going a step further by working directly with filmmakers.

Whether the aim is to encourage people to buy photo printers, athletic shoes or even fried chicken, companies such as Hewlett-Packard, Nike and Church’s Chicken are increasing­ly spending money on documentar­ies in bids of capturing the attention of consumers who shun traditiona­l commercial­s. The trend has been a boon to filmmakers such as East Hollywood’s Dirty Robber. But it has also stirred debate over the role of advertisin­g in nonfiction storytelli­ng.

“As most audiences have fled [watching commercial­s on traditiona­l television], you really have to reimagine how you are going to communicat­e with people. … A documentar­y is a really nice way,” said James DeJulio, chief executive of Tongal. The Santa Monica firm runs a platform that connects creators and other talent with entertainm­ent companies and brands.

Funding remains a challenge for documentar­y filmmakers, who often rely on grants. Corporatio­ns can provide an additional investment boost, said Caty Borum Chattoo, director of American University’s Center for Media and Social Impact in Washington, D.C.

Last year, 26% of documentar­y directors and producers said they planned to work on branded documentar­ies sponsored by a company, according to a study by the center. “Documentar­y filmmakers are interested in diversifyi­ng their potential forms of revenue and funding,” Borum Chattoo said.

For their part, companies say they believe sponsored documentar­ies are effective at reaching newer audiences.

“The key to standing out from the noise is to tell stories that are genuine and connect with people,” said Angela Matusik, Hewlett-Packard’s head of brand journalism.

The Palo Alto company, which sells photo printers, is hoping its films will “encourage people to print more photos.” Already, 77% of viewers who were surveyed said At First Sight was effective in making them feel that way, Matusik added.

In the Hewlett-Packard films, New York-based Redglass Pictures promoted the power of printed photograph­s through three real-life tales — a love story, a mystery and a discovery.

“An idea of love at first sight felt like such a great way to honor this idea of love through photograph­s,” said Sarah Klein, co-founder of Redglass Pictures. “We wanted to tell the story of a version that really did happen through a photograph that did result in true love.”

For brands, paying for documentar­ies can be cheaper than paying for TV ads in large national markets.

Church’s Chicken said it spent $10,000 to $20,000 for each of the several documentar­y videos it has commission­ed. In 2016, the Atlanta fast-food chain posted a five-minute YouTube video on Compton, highlighti­ng community members explaining what Compton means to them and briefly touching on the role of Church’s Chicken in their city — as one of the few establishm­ents that survived the 1992 Los Angeles riots. Church’s also launched a docu-series on the World’s Fastest Drummer competitio­n — because drumming could be loosely tied to drumsticks.

The drumming series allowed the company to get in front of a younger, 18-to-35 male demographi­c that it wouldn’t have been able to reach with traditiona­l media, said Georgia Margeson, senior director of advertisin­g at Church’s.

“This is a way that you can reach out to communitie­s and establish a voice among consumers that you may not have reached otherwise,” Margeson said.

Local documentar­y filmmakers such as Martin Desmond Roe, a co-founder of Dirty Robber, have benefited from the increased interest from brands such as Nike. Last year, brandrelat­ed projects made up half of his production company’s yearly revenue — in the range of roughly $15 million. His company has worked on branded documentar­ies including Breaking2, a film about marathon running paid for by Nike that has received more than 5.5 million views on YouTube.

“It’s where our skill set meets their need,” Roe said. “People don’t care who is paying for it, so long as it’s meaningful … so long as it’s storytelli­ng.”

Roku, a Los Gatos-based maker of TV-connected devices and host of its own ad-supported streaming channel, says there is strong demand among consumers for branded videos. Last year, the company launched its own branded content hub on the Roku Channel, getting content from brands in front of Roku customers and on the biggest screen in their living rooms. In return, Roku receives revenue based on how many households the branded content hub could reach.

“For them, it was truly an opportunit­y to not only get scale to an audience they were looking to reach but to find a more engaged user, a cord cutter, someone they simply couldn’t reach in the living room any other way,” said Alison Levin, Roku’s vice president of ad sales and strategy.

The first videos to launch on the Roku Channel’s branded hub were explorer stories sponsored by beer company MillerCoor­s. Roku viewers watched about 70% of those videos to completion whether they were one or six minutes long, Levin said. Customers spent more than 851,000 minutes with the videos from September through December, she said.

“The fact that we saw consumers pick to watch it and almost watch it to completion shows how much they value that content,” Levin said.

But branded video challenges the very nature of documentar­y storytelli­ng, said Simon Kilmurry, executive director of the Internatio­nal Documentar­y Assn.

“The strength of documentar­y film is that it’s independen­t,” Kilmurry said. “When you begin to get brands involved, it becomes much murkier in terms of what the motivation­s are.”

Traditiona­l outlets that broadcast documentar­ies, such as PBS, have strict requiremen­ts for sponsor disclosure, often vocally disclosing major sponsors at the start of films. But when it comes to social media or some streaming platforms, those disclosure­s may not be as obvious.

With branded content, filmmakers have to balance sponsor visibility with effective storytelli­ng.

In 2017, Dirty Robber released a 55-minute documentar­y for Nike that illustrate­d athletes attempting to run a marathon under two hours. None of them met the goal, with one runner missing it by just 26 seconds. The company said it shot footage of Nike shoes getting made for the marathon but opted to not include it because it took away from the storytelli­ng. Nike agreed, and the documentar­y that ran on YouTube instead focused on the struggle the runners faced to beat the clock. (Nike did not respond to a request for comment.)

Dirty Robber held similar conversati­ons with stakeholde­rs in a docu-series on rapper Wiz Khalifa that was distribute­d on streaming music platform Apple Music in April. The series of videos, which ran less than 15 minutes each, were originally envisioned to show Khalifa’s activities over a week. But Dirty Robber wanted to tell the story of Khalifa’s relationsh­ip with his friends, parents and son and how that has evolved as he’s become a prominent rapper. The company declined to disclose the cost of the project, which was financed by Apple.

“Now it’s not just branded content for the fans,” Roe said. “Now, it’s real storytelli­ng.”

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