Alpine recently opened its Paris flagship store, named L’Atelier, which combines a showroom with a car configurator to help customers choose their model, a boutique, a BLU Café run by a Michelin-starred chef, as well as driving simulators and a space for hosting immersive Watch Parties during Formula 1 Grand Prix races. Not so long ago, we would have called it a Fan Zone, but today, ‘Watch Party’ is the term of choice when seeking to emphasise modernity and suggest that a festive atmosphere takes precedence over fanaticism.
Initiated by influencer Lyas, who had been denied entry to Jonathan Anderson’s first Dior show, a Watch Party involves screening a fashion show live on a giant screen at a different venue (from the Parisian fashion hub La Caserne to the Théâtre du Châtelet) and catering to a different audience. This makes for a unique, lively, passionate, interactive and even inclusive generational gathering—and one that is free (first come, first served). It is a world away from the solemn, ritualised atmosphere of traditional fashion shows.
The term ‘Watch Party’ had everything it needed to go viral. Easy to understand and pronounce, it gives anyone who uses it the feeling that they’re ‘in the loop’. A symbol as much as a word. ‘Watch’ to say that we never stop being spectators of the world, whether on social media or in front of our computers. ‘Party’ to express the desire to share a moment. Participating by watching, watching by participating. Seeing and experiencing simultaneously: undoubtedly a hallmark of our times.
The Society magazine recently reported that several Catholic parishes in New York are filling up, boosted by a surge among young adults. Is this a coincidence? Whether it’s a trend or a religious calling, the desire to meet up IRL and commune with people is gradually taking hold among millennials.
The success of Watch Parties perfectly illustrates the virtuous ingenuity of a generation that reinvents—and thereby appropriates—everything that is beyond its reach. Subversion, dupes, fakes and, in this case, alternative events with different codes, serve as means to an end. It reminds us that sometimes all it takes is a change in the conditions of access to bring forth new imaginaries and new desires. Here’s the proof: it is now brands that want to take part in Watch Parties.