- Food Network is in the bag for Kitchen Aid products. 
- My wife and I point it out like a drinking game when they show random close-ups of the brand badge on ovens. It’s kind of like they’re cutting to the oven for a reaction shot. They do it at least once a segment on every competition show I’ve watched. 
- Is possible that they do, but it’s so subtle that you don’t notice. - We’ve learned to identify and resist ads, so at this point, the most effective ads are the ones we don’t recognize. - On Youtube there is a checkbox to mark paid promotion in a video. There will at least be the common label for paid promotion. I don’t think hiding a paid promotion is worth the risk for big Youtube channels.  - I was thinking of network television. - I do love those paid promotion tags. Lets me know to just keep scrolling. - Over here in the Netherlands TV channels are also required to show a notice about product placement. Of course I already know most channels to skip, but it is nice to have. - We couldn’t have those here in the States. There wouldn’t be any time left for the content. 
 
- Oh, my bad, thought it was only YouTube. 
 
 
- Also could go the milk route where all brands pool funds to advertise for people to buy milk rather than specific brands. - Say what you will, but those ads are the reason I’ll never forget Aaron Burr. - “Aawon Mmmrrr! Aawwon Mmrrr!!” 
 
 
 
- Because they don’t want to do anything to make brands not buy the spots during the episode. - So if an episode has product placement for pasta sauce A then pasta sauce B, C, and D don’t want to buy commercial spots for usually the entire run of the show. - It’s not set in stone but having it be that way for all your shows makes it easy to sell big blocks of commercial spots spread across the network. - But movies are fine? Aka a guy with the last name of Bay? - Product placement are the commercials in movies. - Absolutely true, and yet wonehow we also ended up with commercial breaks in movies on streaming platforms on top of that. 
 
 
 





