Is Jon Hamm's latest show Your Friends & Neighbors a big luxury watch ad?
The star of award-winning period series Mad Men (2007 to 2015) – who has lent his assertive baritone to Mercedes-Benz advertisements, an American Airlines spot and a Super Bowl intro – was back on television enumerating the merits of an expensive wristwatch.
Only this time, it was not for an ad. It was a scene from the first episode of Your Friends & Neighbors, a soft satire of the financially fortunate streaming on Apple TV+.
'The Patek Philippe Nautilus sealed 18-karat white-gold blue sunburst dial, water-resistant up to 30 metres,' Hamm intoned in voice-over, as graphics whizzed across the screen noting the watch's 2.3mm thickness and other wonky specs. Up flashed the price of this timepiece: US$70,110 (S$91,618) at retail, but around US$169,000 on the resale market.
Jon Hamm's character Coop steals a Patek Philippe Nautilus watch in the series Your Friends & Neighbors. The watch gets a unique moment in the scene, almost like a commercial.
PHOTO: APPLE TV+
In the crime drama's first episode, Hamm's Andrew Cooper, a hedge fund titan who goes by the nickname Coop, finds himself unceremoniously out of a job. With a shrivelling bank account and a money-burning lifestyle, he turns to robbing his well-off neighbours.
His first target is the Patek. As Coop pulls the watch from a cubbyhole of similar timepieces, he treats viewers to a data-dense recap of what makes the watch so special – and, by extension, so worth stealing.
'Like the ads say, you never actually own a Patek Philippe,' Hamm says in character. 'You merely look after it for the next generation.'
The scene is a point of no return for Coop, but its ad-like approach made some viewers assume it was a paid-for cameo for the Swiss luxury watch brand.
'The amount of screen time the Patek watch gets, plus the special sequence, make it likely that this is an active product placement,' said Mr Remmert van Braam, who runs Watch-ID.com, a website which catalogues watches worn on movies and TV shows.
The watchmaker, however, said it did not know it would be receiving the Jon Hamm treatment in the show.
'As part of our global brand strategy, we do not lend timepieces for product placements as we remain focused on the watch-making field,' a representative from Patek Philippe said.
Hamm is a pitchman whom audiences are used to hearing during breaks for the long-running game show Jeopardy! (1964 to present), but his biggest role, the one he may always live in the shadow of, was as top ad man Don Draper in Mad Men.
Your Friends & Neighbors is trading on, and perhaps subverting, people's familiarity with or even their trust in the 54-year-old American actor.
Hamm – an executive producer on the series – is not writing the marketing copy this time, he is dispensing it. He even drew his own connection between the characters, saying in an interview with The New York Times: 'Don was a seller, and Coop is a buyer.'
And boy, is he. Coop drives a Maserati that, he notes in voiceover, cost US$200,000. He refuses to drink anything other than 25-year-old Scotch, ordering it by the age, and talks about wearing his best suit to a job interview.
In the second episode, Coop steals a Richard Mille Felipe Massa watch from a neighbour. It receives a similar treatment to that of the Patek, with specs ticking by on-screen as Hamm's character notes its signature rose-gold and titanium skeleton and flyback function and price that is upwards of US$225,000. His neighbour, he concludes, has not worn it in years, so he may have forgotten he owns it.
Jon Hamm as Coop steals a Richard Mille Felipe Massa watch in the series Your Friends & Neighbors.
PHOTO: APPLE TV+
A representative from Richard Mille said the Swiss luxury watchmaker had similarly not been informed that the watch would be appearing in the show.
According to the prop masters, the breakout infomercial sequences are a feature of the series and, in later episodes, will not be limited to watches. The result is that Your Friends & Neighbors is often a show that quite literally fetishises wealth, like a streaming TV version of the elitist American luxury lifestyle periodical The Robb Report.
The voice-of-god pseudo-ads also help viewers sympathise with a financier like Coop, so caught up in the game of coveting his neighbour's wristwatch. As he continues filching from his friends ('Keeping up with the Joneses' giving way to 'Keep stealing from the Joneses'), the flashing karat counts and big-dollar figures seem to say, 'Well, wouldn't you want this too?'
In an interview from the front seat of a car, during a break in the filming of the show's second season, Ryan Gargiulo and Jackie Wertz, the husband-and-wife prop masters, explained that some watches in Your Friends & Neighbors were specified in the script, while others were selected with their input.
Gargiulo said he and Wertz 'did about 10 weeks of research and we went around to different bars frequented by these big investment firms'. There, they clocked that financiers walk around with US$80,000 hunks of gold strapped to their wrists.
The prop masters borrowed the watches used on the show from authorised vendors who charged 'between 5 and 10 per cent of the value' for a one-day shoot, Gargiulo said. 'It saves us US$180,000 and we don't have to try to resell it at the end of the job,' he said.
'In my opinion, I think it's like a free commercial for the brand,' Gargiulo said of the unofficial watch placements. He said he could not speculate on how they might react.
'I just hope they're not upset with us,' he said. NYTIMES
Your Friends & Neighbors is available on Apple TV+.
Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
2 days ago
- Straits Times
Thousands of dollars worth of Labubus stolen from California store
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox About S$5,100 worth of stolen goods have been returned to the owners, although it is not immediately clear how they were recovered. Thieves broke into a California store and stole thousands of dollars worth of Labubus on Aug 6 – the trendy Chinese plushies and this generation's version of Cabbage Patch dolls – according to the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Office. Footage released on Instagram by the store, Onestopsaless, shows a group of thieves quickly swiping boxes and dolls off shelves. They then enter the back of the store and grab armfuls of merchandise. Labubus are fuzzy Nordic elves – all female – who sometimes come with outfits. They are made exclusively by Pop Mart, a Chinese company. The toys are so popular that people line up for hours at stores for the chance to buy one. Shoppers often do not know which Labubu they are getting because some of them come in a blind box, meaning their identity is unknown until the box is opened. There are more than 300 versions of the toys, with each doll costing roughly US$30 (S$38.50) , though some limited-edition versions fetch more. The website for Onestopsaless shows Labubus sell for as much as $500. The dolls have spawned communities – in real life and online – where fans share tips about how to dress the figures. The demand has also driven a market for fakes , called Lafufus . Celebrities, including Rihanna and Cher, have sported them on their handbags. The dolls, which also come in keychains, have been featured hanging off designer bags, such as a Hermes Birkin. Ms Joanna Avendano and Mr Leonardo Rodriguez opened Onestopsaless, which sells trending collectibles and accessories, such as Powerpuff Girls and Hello Kitty merchandise, a few months ago, Ms Avendano said. The store also stocks products from Miniso, a Chinese retailer that sells licensed collections from brands such as Disney and Pokemon, toys, plushies and other products. The thieves drove a stolen Toyota Tacoma to the store on Glendora Avenue in La Puente, California, around 1.30am local time , according to a news release from the sheriff's office. When police first responded, Ms Avendano said she was unable to go into the store and initially estimated the loss to be about US $7,000. Later, after she managed to take an inventory, she revised that estimate to US $25,000. A detective for the sheriff's office confirmed she provided a list. Investigators on Aug 7 returned about US $4,000 worth of the stolen goods, which included some Labubus and other merchandise, Ms Avendano said. It was not immediately clear how the stolen goods were recovered. NYTIMES


CNA
3 days ago
- CNA
U can't pay this: MC Hammer sued over delinquent car loan
Baggy pants-wearing rapper MC Hammer is being sued in a US court for allegedly failing to pay off a car loan. The man behind the 1990 megahit U Can't Touch This is facing a lawsuit from JPMorgan Chase claiming he has stopped making payments on a luxury Land Rover. The suit, filed in a California court last week, names MC Hammer and U Can't Touch This LLC as defendants in the case, claiming the bank loaned them US$114,000 (S$146,000) to buy the vehicle in 2023. But after allegedly missing a number of monthly payments, the rapper and his company still owe more than US$76,000. Hammer, whose real name is Stanley Burrell, broke onto the rap scene in the 1980s, but became a global figure with U Can't Touch This. The rapper's signature "Hammer Pants", coupled with his rapidly moving elastic legs, made for a dance move that was copied all over the world. Despite a tie-up Mattel figurine and the Hammerman cartoon, his stardom waned and by the mid-1990s, Hammer was going through bankruptcy.
Business Times
3 days ago
- Business Times
Paramount closes US$8 billion merger with Skydance after settling ‘60 Minutes' lawsuit
[BENGALURU] Paramount Global and Skydance Media completed their US$8.4 billion merger on Thursday (Aug 7), capping a drawn-out deal process marked by political scrutiny and shareholder concerns. Renamed 'Paramount Skydance Corp', the company's Class B shares began trading on the Nasdaq under the ticker symbol PSKY on Thursday, under the deal announced more than a year ago. They closed up US$0.10, or 1 per cent, to US$11.74. The merger combines Paramount's sprawling global distribution network and prized film and TV library with Skydance's production and technological capabilities. 'Today marks Day One of a new Paramount... the coming months will be defined by a series of focused efforts to re-engineer how our company operates, produces its creative content, and goes to market,' said David Ellison, chairman and CEO of the combined company. The company will be structured into three business segments, studios, direct-to-consumer, and TV media, with Ellison emphasising the need to expand Paramount's technological capabilities, grow its streaming business and prioritise cash flow. Paramount, like other legacy media players, is struggling with a sagging traditional linear TV business as consumers shift to streaming platforms. It took nearly US$6 billion in write-downs on cable assets. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) cleared the merger last month, weeks after Paramount settled a lawsuit filed by US President Donald Trump over CBS' editing of a '60 Minutes' interview with his Democratic presidential opponent Kamala Harris. The merger was approved after Skydance agreed to ensure CBS news and entertainment programming would be free of bias, hire an ombudsman for at least two years to review complaints, and end diversity programmes. Democratic FCC commissioner Anna Gomez, who voted against the merger, said the closing 'marks the final chapter of a dark moment in our nation's history. After months of cowardly capitulation, including an unprecedented payout to settle a meritless lawsuit in exchange for regulatory approval, Paramount and Skydance have completed their merger'. Gomez criticised the company's agreement to 'never-before-seen forms of government control over newsroom decisions and editorial judgement – actions that violate both the First Amendment and the law'. FCC chair Brendan Carr, a Republican, defended the provisions, saying it was necessary to include a commitment to more 'fact-based reporting, unbiased journalism... It is clear to me that something fundamental needs to change when it comes to the legacy mainstream media'. REUTERS