HBO’s Home of the Dragon Season 2 advertising is fueling the hearth of discourse, leaving followers questioning all the things from their allegiances to their realities.
In partnership with Big Spoon, RQ and Busterwood, HBO and Max rolled out a world marketing campaign instantly involving followers for Season 2 of the Recreation of Thrones prequel, making them select a facet within the Targaryen civil battle between the inexperienced banners of King Aegon II (Tom Glynn-Carney) or the black banners of Queen Rhaenyra (Emma D’Arcy).
The marketing campaign kicked off in direction of the tip of March with dueling trailers asking followers to decide on a facet, with the trailers breaking Max viewership data. Then, it developed into the message of “Elevate Your Banners,” with AI-generated posters, influencers weighing in and even a dragon showing on prime of the Empire State Constructing.
Plus, banners appeared around the globe to assert landmarks for both facet. Or did they?
In June, HBO and Max got down to divide New York, claiming the New York Inventory Alternate, Rockefeller Heart, Grand Central Terminal and The Mets’ Citi Area for both the inexperienced facet or black facet with bodily banners. Native NYC bars and eating places additionally joined in, providing customized meals objects and unique Home of the Dragon merch.
Nevertheless, along with the bodily activations, 32 establishments worldwide additionally donned CGI banners that have been amplified on social and thru numerous companions and influencers. And the outcomes despatched the web ablaze.
“Elevate Your Banners” drove over 1.4 billion estimated social impressions the week of the June 16 premiere*, in response to knowledge from CreatorIQ offered by HBO and Max. And that’s with out counting press.
For instance of the digital activations, the Brooklyn and Manhattan Bridges raised banners for Workforce Inexperienced and Workforce Black, respectively, in a viral CGI stunt. Different international landmarks, together with the Eiffel Tower, Sugarloaf Mountain in Rio de Janeiro, Sydney Harbor and Al Ula in Saudi Arabia, adopted swimsuit.
“What we wished to do was create a sequence of stunts around the globe that simply blurred the traces between bodily and digital, after which we began seeing individuals query, ‘Is that actual?’” Pia Barlow, evp of originals advertising at HBO and Max, informed ADWEEK. “What’s actual? What’s not actual? On the finish of the day, it didn’t matter. It was all about taking that easy name to motion, making it international and to get individuals speaking, which we did.”