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    Home»Fashion»“Chaos and Humor”: How Brands Can Tap Into Micro-Dramas
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    “Chaos and Humor”: How Brands Can Tap Into Micro-Dramas

    completebodyneeds@gmail.comBy completebodyneeds@gmail.comMay 19, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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    “I am so sorry, I can’t go anywhere in New York,” Rachel Senott says, satirically shrugging off the paparazzo she paid to pap her in a Manhattan park. This is just one of the funny moments in recent micro-drama The Scene, a three-minute movie conceived by Marc Jacobs to promote its latest bag of the same name.

    Originating in China around 2021, and known locally as duanju, micro-dramas are scripted, easily digestible video series — but their impact is anything but small. Figures released by the Chinese government last year show that half of all internet users in the country have now watched a micro-drama, an industry predicted to reach $26 billion by 2030, according to Media Partners Asia. Earlier this year, TikTok launched a standalone app called Pinedrama, which allows its global user base to stream micro-dramas beyond China.

    Micro-dramas are built around emotional hooks that work fast to captivate audiences and low-commitment viewing that sits naturally on social media, doubling up as one of the first true examples of social-native advertising. As static image campaigns struggle to hold attention on video-first platforms like TikTok and Xiaohongshu, fashion is waking up to the opportunity. Some luxury brands have already produced micro-dramas for the Chinese market — Loewe’s series Say Yes to Love for Qixi (Chinese Valentine’s Day) went viral in 2025, racking up 62 million views on Weibo to date — but a cross-section of fashion is now importing the format for a Western audience.

    According to Chinese market research firm Daxue, the rapid growth of the format is set to accelerate further, as more brands recognize its potential. “While a movie might correspond to a million-strong audience and a TV series covers 100 million, micro-dramas can access audiences at unprecedented scale,” says Daxue project director Grace Yu.

    “Brands are realizing the value in repeatable content series that audiences can follow like a show,” says Joel Marlinson, founder of social media strategist Coldest Creative. He points to the recent creation of Gap’s chief entertainment officer role, which was taken up by Pam Kaufman after leaving her post as CEO of international markets at Paramount. “In the fashion space, brands now need to act like entertainment production houses to stay relevant,” Marlinson adds.

    Balancing high and low

    According to Launchmetrics, the media impact value (MIV) of micro-dramas reached $2.5 million in March 2026, up from $30,000 a year prior. “What we’re seeing in the data is that micro-dramas and serialized content aren’t just performing well, they’re driving sustained engagement in a way that one-off moments rarely do,” says Launchmetrics CMO Alison Bringé. (MIV measures the impact of brand mentions across voices and channels, assigning a monetary value to media exposure.)

    Even so, micro-dramas have an image problem. First dominated by titles like Orange Cat Taoist Priest: Fighting the Zombie King in China and The Double Life of My Billionaire Husband in the US, the format initially became known for low-brow ‘brain rot’ content often using AI, or featuring glaringly amateur acting. Conscious of cheapening their images, luxury brands have been slow to adapt, but early adopters are now breaking the mold by investing in Hollywood-worthy production to stay on-brand, while tapping into the influence micro-dramas possess.

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