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An Influencer Couple Is Being Accused Of Faking Their Engagement For Sponcon

The proposal was pitched to brands in a 10-page PDF

Just when you thought Priyanka Chopra and Nick Jonasโ€™ five-day wedding extravaganza, sponsored by Google Pixel, Amazon, Tiffanyโ€™s and pretty much every other brand on Earth, was bad, try pimping out your wedding proposal โ€“ before itโ€™s even happened.

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On Tuesday, fashion influencer Marissa Casey Fuchs, known on Instagram by her handle @fashionambitionist, shared a video to her 140,000-plus followers showing her boyfriend, Gabriel Grossman, speaking to the camera and telling her he has โ€œthe most important question of [his] lifeโ€ to ask.

Grossman adds that because he and Fuchs arenโ€™t โ€œreally into traditional weddings,โ€ heโ€™s planned something special for her and she is about to embark on โ€œan extraordinary adventure.โ€ When Fuchs posts the video to her feed, she writes, โ€œWHAT IS HAPPENING?!โ€

When the post originally went live, fans and publications jumped on board, ready to see what romantic activities Grossman had planned. Off the back of the hype, Fuchs gained 20,000+ followers. However, according to a report by The Atlantic, the proposal and what came next โ€“ a scavenger hunt taking the couple from New York to Montauk to Miami to Paris โ€“ wasnโ€™t a surprise at all, in fact, it had been pitched to brands in the lead up with a detailed 10-page PDF.

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The pitch, which has now been uploaded in full online, was reportedly sent to โ€œmarketers at various brands and agencies outlining the future engagement in the context of a potential sponsorship,โ€ per The Atlantic. It includes details about how the pair met, the entire itinerary of the trip โ€“ including that Grossman plans to propose at 2:45pm today (21st June) with a flash mob outside of the Louvre in Paris โ€“ and Fuchsโ€™ statistics.

Since first publishing their expose, The Atlantic has updated the article saying Grossman reached out and was โ€œadamant that Fuchs has no knowledge of the deck or imminent proposal and that they โ€œreceived no direct payment for Fuchsโ€™s posts. In fact, he said, most brands didnโ€™t even respond.โ€

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