History of Product placement in movies:
Oliver Noble’s video, ‘A Brief History of Conspicuous Product Placement in Movies’ runs a timeline on embedded advertising from its debut in a silent movie through to 47-brand-placing Transformers, and makes an interesting, if not slightly cynical, coffee-break watch. Product placement advertising is incredibly commonplace in movies, on TV and in music videos these days, but did you know the phenomenon that is considered such a modern-day marketing initiative actually dates back to the early 1900's?
Fatty Arbuckle film first to use paid-for Product Placement
The video reveals that the first documented, paid-for product placement advertisement appeared in a silent movie starring Fatty Arbuckle back in 1919. And that Hershey’s Chocolate used product placement in 1927 in ‘Wings’ – the first ever film to win an Academy Award for best picture. Even the Marx Brothers got involved in 1932 picture ‘Horse Feathers’ where Life Saver’s Candy made a timely appearance.
And who could forget E.T.’s craving for Hershey’s Reece’s Pieces in Steven Spielberg’s 1982 blockbuster? Their £1million investment reportedly boosted sales by 65%, a memory Mars – who were given first refusal, and took it – would no doubt rather forget.
The Future Backs Brands
Mac and Me, The Wizard and Back to the Future in the late 1980s are considered by Noble as some of the first movies to have gone too far with product placement and cites, as does the rest of the world, Adam Sandler as the Oscar-winner when it comes to embedded advertising.
Into the 21st Century, and Noble’s video explains we’re seeing more brands than ever per movie; in 2005 a total of 35 brands were placed in The Island, from Cadillac to Xbox. And in 2009, this record was blown out of the water when a staggering 47 brand owners took advantage of the opportunity to feature in Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen.
“Creating a Positive Emotional Association with the Viewer”