Dylan Efron’s new Kohl’s FLX campaign is more than a spring style play—it’s the monetization blueprint every reality-TV alumnus will study: win two competition shows, lock in a family-friendly retailer, and sell the same athleisure you actually live in.
The Traitor Who Traded Daggers for Driver Irons
Four months after outwitting 21 competitors to win Peacock’s The Traitors, Dylan Efron is swapping castle corridors for Kohl’s men’s department. The 34-year-old producer-adventurer fronts the retailer’s FLX spring drop, a line built for consumers who treat 18 holes like HIIT training.
Why Kohl’s Bet on the Second Efron
Retail analytics from Placer.ai show Kohl’s foot traffic among 25-44-year-old men up 9 % in test markets where FLX aired connected-TV spots featuring Dylan. The chain’s private-label margin on FLX exceeds 60 %, dwarfing the 25 % it earns on national denim brands. Translation: every Dylan polo that replaces a Levi’s shelf slot pays Kohl’s an extra 35 % profit.
From Reality Credits to Revenue Streams
- Q1 2026: Efron’s Dancing with the Stars finale drew 5.9 million live viewers, his largest weekly audience since The Traitors finale (4.3 million next-day).
- His Instagram engagement rate jumped to 8.7 % during DWTS, well above the 3 % sportswear benchmark Variety catalogs for athlete influencers.
- Kohl’s caps the partnership with a five-city DWTS Live Tour pop-up inside stores; the tour itself plays 34 arenas, funneling six-figure merch potential back to FLX.
The Capsule: Golf Polos, Chino Joggers, and Ellie Kemper as “Kohl’s Mom”
Unlike fast-fashion collabs that expire in 45 days, FLX is a permanent sub-brand. The spring set adds moisture-wicking dress polos, four-way-stretch chino pants, and recycled-poly fleece—all under $60. Comic actor Ellie Kemper cameos as the campaign’s parental voice, signaling Kohl’s intent to keep the line mass-family, not niche-bro.
Competitive Scorecard: How FLX Stacks Up
- Price: FLX golf polo $39.99 vs. Nike Dri-FIT at $65.
- Distribution: 1,100 Kohl’s doors plus omnichannel return versus Lululemon’s 710.
- Brand Heat: Dylan Efron’s Q rating among men 18-34 is 24, edging past retired NFL players Kohl’s previously featured, per THR brand sentiment data.
What Zac Really Told Him About Style
Dylan credits brother Zac Efron—who fronted Hugo Boss and his own Netflix travel brand—with one directive: “Timeless over trendy.” It’s the same philosophy that let Zac recycle a 2018 cotton bomber into multiple Down to Earth episodes, keeping Google search volume for the jacket above 50k for three straight years.
Why This Matters for Celebrity-Retail Symbiosis
Kohl’s isn’t just buying Dylan’s Q score; it’s buying his pipeline. He produces outdoor-adventure content under his Thrill基础设施 banner, shoots in FLX gear, and feeds 4K footage back to Kohl’s social team—turning one campaign fee into an evergreen content studio. Expect other chains to chase similar “ Creator-in-Residence” clauses before 2027 up-fronts.
Next Holes to Play
Look for Dylan wearing unreleased FLX snowboard shells during his upcoming Everybody Dance Now Netflix special, filmed in Utah next month. If the pieces test well on-stream, Kohl’s will expand FLX into winter sports for holiday 2026, finally giving the retailer a budget answer to Parker McCollum’s Columbia collab at Dick’s.
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