Alloy, Kmart Get Ready for High School in ‘First Day’

If content is King, marketing Queen, and distribution a Prince or Princess, then Alloy Media + Marketing is the entire royal family.

The provider of “youth-focused innovative media” has produced some of the most popular teen-oriented programming in recent memory, both online and off (including Gossip Girl, Vampire Diaries, Haute & Bothered, and Private). The company is behind some of the most trafficked online destinations (including www.alloy.com, www.teen.com, and www.gurl.com), drawing more than 17 million millennials every month across its network. And Alloy also owns and operates Channel One, a news program broadcast to middle schools and high schools across the US with a daily reach of over six million teens.

With these assets, Alloy has developed a model for web TV success: 1) Find a web series that targets teens (possibly based on a popular novel from Alloy’s book publishing division), 2) attach a sponsor looking to reach teens, 3) market the hell out of the series across Channel One and on all of Alloy’s websites, 4) distribute the series across those very same properties, 5) repeat steps 1 through 4.

Subscribe for daily Tubefilter Top Stories

Subscribe

It worked with Haute and Bothered and LG. Then again with Private and Johnson & Johnson. Alloy’s now hoping the model holds for First Day and Kmart.

Starring Tracey Fairaway (Make It or Break It) and Elizabeth McLaughlin (Ugly BettyThe Clique), First Day follows a “teenage girl who repeatedly relives her first day at a new school.” It’s like Groundhogs Day for pubescents, showcasing back-to-school gear and Selena Gomez’s fashion line instead of Bill Murray.

The eight episode original web series debuts tomorrow and features “unique retail components” in each installment. Viewers will be able to click over to Kmart.com and by products worn by First Day characters. A sweepstakes will also send one lucky winner to NYC for his or her (most likely her) head-to-toe Kmart makeover.

In addition to First Day, Alloy is scheduled to release two more digital properties before the end of the year. Hollywood is like High School With Money, a web series adaptation of Zoey Dean’s New York Times bestselling novel of the same name and Talent, a music talent search that’s part scripted series and part reality TV show.

Share
Published by
Joshua Cohen

Recent Posts

Jordan Matter, Michelle Khare, and Samir Chaudry are strategic advisors at a new creator education startup

As our industry becomes ever more populated by experts, and in the absence of collaborative…

19 hours ago

YouTube says Premium subscribers are “podcast super-users.” So it’s giving them more exclusive listening features.

With the amount of attention audio content is getting lately, we might as well rebrand…

20 hours ago

Have you heard? PewDiePie drops vlogs, Spy Ninjas spends $25 million, and Jason Kelce gets a YouTube show

Each week, we handpick a selection of stories to give you a snapshot of trends,…

21 hours ago

Netflix and Spotify just paid $100 million to take Jay Shetty’s podcast off YouTube

Netflix has visited the farm once again. The streamer and Spotify have together poached Jay…

2 days ago

What’s on the menu for the Sidemen? A cooking competition split between YouTube and Prime Video.

The creator supergroup that revived Supermarket Sweep on YouTube is ordering up another culinary competition.…

2 days ago

Meta officially offers perks for paying subscribers across Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp

Meta is establishing paid subscription tiers across its network of social media platforms. A trio…

2 days ago