At first sight,Peter Baumgartner Louise Delage is just a normal 25-year-old from Paris who likes posting pictures of herself on Instagram enjoying a meal at a restaurant.
SEE ALSO: Instagram's drafts feature is finally open to everyoneHer profile gathered a staggering 66,000 followers in just over a month (she joined on Aug. 1). Delage's pictures of hanging out with friends, captioned with an insane amount of hashtags, received as many as 50 likes per day.
View this post on Instagram
View this post on Instagram
There's only one little caveat: Delage is not real.
On 22 Sept. she posted a video clip that revealed she was just the product of the campaign "Like my addiction" by advertising agency BETC.
In the last of the Instagram videos, all 150 of Delage's photos are played in sequence, one after the other, with the focus narrowing on the alcoholic drinks she is consuming.
View this post on Instagram
It turns out that in (almost) every picture of her fake profile, the Parisian is enjoying a drink -- be it a glass of rosé, a cocktail or a bottle of beer.
View this post on Instagram
The campaign was created for Addicte Aide, which aims to raise awareness about alcoholism among young people.
BETC Paris president and creative director Stéphane Xiberras told Adweek that the agency had been briefed "on the difficulty of detecting the addiction of someone close to you -- a friend, a child or a parent."
"We thought an interesting way of showing it would be to create a person people would meet every day but whom we'd never suspect of being an addict, by setting up a fake Instagram account," he said.
Xiberras' team posted two-to-three posts per day at high-traffic moments. The agency also studied fashion bloggers to incorporate habits and filters they commonly use.
View this post on Instagram
At least 20 fashion or food-related hashtags were included in each post and a highly efficient bot was created to like and follow specific people -- such as women interested in fashion bloggers, journalists and celebrities.
Another part of the social media strategy was to create a "KOL [Key Opinion Leader] strategy" using influencers or hubs with 20,000 to 100,000 followers, who were able to "spread the Louise Delage profile among their own followers."
It looks like it worked: Addict Aide saw five times more traffic on its site and the story became a TT on Twitter in France. The video had 500,000 views across all social media.
"Hopefully the campaign has served as an eye-opener for some," Xiberras said. "I hope they will contact Addict Aide or other local organisations working to help people struggling with addiction."
Topics Instagram Social Media
Cashed OutThe Good, the Bad, and the GOPSilicon Valley’s Blind SpotNYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for May 28: Tips to solve Connections #247Ill Liberal ArtsOld NASA space satellite crashes to EarthInfluencer Society and Its FutureThe Battle over Memory at El MozoteLast Gasp of the Lost CauseBear WitnessNuding OutCashed OutSincerely, from Some Other Side of the MountainSeeing HolesEmpire 2.0Unsolved MysteriesThe Reporter Without BordersAgainst the UniverseHow Empires FallBuild Back Baffler Best Echo Dot deal: Score the Amazon Echo Dot for under $23 The Little Shoppe of Negativity 'Rustin' review: An awful film with a tremendous lead performance 'Real Housewives' star Jen Shah sentenced to 6.5 years in prison: The internet reacts The Ontology of Circus Peanuts by Jane Stern Steam Deck OLED sale: Steam Deck OLED consoles are available to buy now How to watch Alabama vs. UTC Mocs football livestreams: kickoff time, streaming deals, and more Chekhov On: What’s Better? 'Scott Pilgrim Takes Off' review: Ready for a remix of the movie and the graphic novels? A Party in the Archive (Container Lovers Only) ‘Neil the Horse’ Rides Again Google Search's AI image generator lets you dream up products — and shop the real versions “Human Life Is Punishment,” and Other Pleasures of Studying Latin Chekhov On: A Case of Mania Grandiosa How the Unflappable Fred Astaire Survived the Fifties Writing Roundabout: An Interview with Sam Stephenson Robert Coover’s Dark Fantasy Announcing Our New Web Editor by The Paris Review 'The Crown' Season 6 review: Netflix's series faces Princess Diana's death I ♥ John Giorno and So Should You by Chantal McStay
3.0241s , 8248.7890625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Peter Baumgartner】,Steady Information Network