- May 1, 2006
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Have any of you gotten your hand slapped for boosting a post with a celebrity in it? Or used a celeb in your ads?
Have any of you gotten your hand slapped for boosting a post with a celebrity in it? Or used a celeb in your ads?
Pay more you cheap bastard![]()
Seriously though, why the question?
I don't like it. . Relevant content vs News/Celebrity jacking. Sure you may draw attention but is it the attention you are looking for. It's a 2008 tactic if you want my opinion.
How does grabbing someone's attention with relevant content provided through a "celebrity" feel? Like the meme from before. Genuinely curious on your thought here.
It doesn't feel like a cheap tactic when the goal is to engage someone so they can learn about what you're doing/selling. Pop culture can be useful in marketing for that very reason. Maybe the issue lies in letting those giving the wrong attention get too far down your pipeline.
The thread discusses the risks and effectiveness of using celebrity images in Facebook advertising and boosted posts, with one user reporting a permanent ban from major social platforms after using a celebrity photo. Opinions diverge on the tactic's value: some argue it's an outdated approach that attracts the wrong audience, while others contend that celebrity/pop culture references can be effective if used strategically and tied to relevant content. The key insight is that while celebrity imagery can generate engagement, it often doesn't translate to meaningful business results and carries significant platform enforcement risks.