Direct response has become so prevalent lately that even TV shows and restaurants are using it as fake marketing bait. As a fan of HBO’s “True Blood†on Facebook, from time to time teaser items will appear on my News Feed. Recently it tempted fans to check out an infomercial from The American Vampire League, a fictitious vampire rights group in the show. It’s interesting that an infomercial was considered the appropriate marketing vehicle to further entice fans. Perhaps vampires were simply following in Obama’s footsteps!Â
Aside from social media marketing, “True Blood†has made a big splash in traditional media too. In L.A. alone it was hard to miss the second season debut as stars Anna Paquin and Stephen Moyer graced everything from the entire side of a Sunset Strip office building, to busses and even bus stop benches.
 But in the end, it looks like the intense mixed marketing effort paid off. According to The Hollywood Reporter, the second season premiere of “True Blood†was the most-watched program on HBO since “The Sopranos†finale. An article in Sunday’s New York Times went so far as to say that “True Blood†has brought HBO out of its slump!
Consequently, Burger King has released a new ad campaign that utilizes a home shopping format to distinguish the value of the Whooper JR.
For direct response professionals, while these campaigns are drenched in irony, they still salute to the fact that DR is a mainstay marketing force to be reckoned with.
Pat Cauley is Electronic Retailer magazine’s eMedia editor.Â
Tags: anna paquin, bill, blog, burger king, commercials, Electronic Retailer, hbo, home shopping, Infomercials, pat cauley, sookie, sopranos, stephen moyer, true blood, vampires, whopper



















It’s interesting to see the avenues HBO is taking to further entice fans. True Blood is creating a fantasy world. Just today there was a FB newsfeed from True Blood advertising Fellowship of the Sun t-shirts. I’m a sucker for True Blood, but I’m not that crazy. With the development of social media tools and direct response marketing, are fiction and reality beginning to merge?