Dads is Apple TV+'s latest presentation, a documentary feature exploring the positives and perils of fatherhood using experiences of both celebrities and non-celebrities. Put together by first-time feature filmmaker Bryce Dallas Howard—eldest daughter of director/actor Ron Howard (both pictured at top), who co-produced the movie through Imagine Entertainment—Dads was primarily financed by Unilever under its umbrella of Dove Men+Care products. Aline Santos, Unilever's Executive Vice President Marketing and Chief Diversity and Inclusion Officer, discussed the Dads investment during her Jack Myers Leadership Conversation hour last week.
"(Dove) is a big sponsor of paternity and maternity leave, so we want to expand the rights for men to have paternity leave all around the world," Santos explained. "This is something that we are doing with them. It's absolutely amazing."
Read Jeff Minsky's commentary Unilever's Purpose Leads to a Father's Day Gift for Us All
For Unilever, Dads represents the beginning of a new TV direction, one where you go beyond commercials to exhibit social values, or in Santos' vocabulary, purpose. "if you are selling a soap, the conversation is not only about soap, it's about self-esteem, a positive image of your body," she suggested. "There are so many different elements, so many different aspects. That makes it much easier to create content in a different way, that you can be participating differently. New media, channels that we didn't have before."
The roster of celebrities seen in Dads includes Will Smith, Jimmy Fallon, Hazan Manaj, Ken Jeong, Conan O'Brien, and Kenan Thompson. Apple TV+ presents Bryce Dallas Howard's film commercial-free. Before coming to TV June 19, Dads received a screening last year at the Toronto International Film Festival and was second runner-up for the event's People's Choice Documentary Award.
Howard appreciated Unilever's financial support of her documentary. "It was really clear that it wasn't a commercial for them," she told The Los Angeles Times last week. "It wasn't (about) advertising products. It wasn't even advertising their name. They wanted to invest in supporting modern fathers around the world."
"It's empowering men to get in there, and empowering women to allow for that to happen," Howard added.
Santos hopes Dads will trigger a paternity rights movement that extends beyond what individual companies enact. "Around the world, this is something that (our brand) is fighting for. This is something that we are changing, and we are making sure that more and more countries have legislation that can give this right for men," Santos declared.
The explosion and viewer acceptance of new content options, many circulating through smart TV sets and TV-connected gadgets, will lead to many more non-commercial ways advertisers can empower the public, Santos continued. "For brands to really thrive, they need to be in the front seat with consumers because at the moment, consumers are leading the way. The sweet spot between brands and consumers is to be co-creators, to be the ones who are going to be shaping culture."
(SPECIAL NOTE: Over this past Father's Day weekend, ESPN's SportsCenter presented a "SC Featured" segment on #GirlDad, the movement celebrating father-daughter relationships launched after the death of Kobe Bryant earlier this year. Dove Men+Care sponsored this feature.)
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