Fact Check

Emma Watson's Cleavage Was Digitally Altered for a Misleading YouTube Ad

The ad that featured the star of "Harry Potter" and "Little Women" appeared to claim, without providing evidence, that Watson had undergone surgery.

Published Dec 15, 2023

Actor Emma Watson attends "The Circle" Paris Photocall at Hotel Le Bristol on June 22, 2017 in Paris, France. (Photo by Laurent Viteur/WireImage) (Laurent Viteur/WireImage)
Actor Emma Watson attends "The Circle" Paris Photocall at Hotel Le Bristol on June 22, 2017 in Paris, France. (Photo by Laurent Viteur/WireImage)
Claim:
A picture in a YouTube ad that led to Reference.com accurately depicted actor Emma Watson's cleavage, with the caption of the ad hinting that she had undergone surgery.
Context

This photo was fake. Watson's cleavage was doctored. Further, nothing about Watson having surgery was revealed in the 136-page slideshow article that resulted from the ad.

On Dec. 15, 2023, a doctored photo of actor Emma Watson's cleavage was displayed in a paid ad on YouTube that appeared to claim that she had undergone some sort of surgery. The bottom of the picture below was altered to make it appear as if she had much larger breasts. The caption of the ad read, "'Harry Potter' Star Gets Surgery. No Way These Are the Same People."

A doctored picture of actor Emma Watson made her cleavage look larger for clickbait purposes.

The original, undoctored version of the picture that appeared in the misleading ad was captured on June 21, 2017, at a premiere for "The Circle" in Paris, France. A genuine photo credited to Pascal Le Segretain for Getty Images showed a very similar angle of Watson at the same premiere, as did another real picture hosted by The Associated Press.

Upon clicking on the ad, we were led to a 136-page slideshow article on Reference.com. The headline of the story read, "The Cast of Harry Potter Has Changed Dramatically Since the Films."

However, any readers who took on the arduous task of scrolling or clicking through all of the slides in the article would have found that it did not feature the same photo of Watson, nor did it mention anything about her having surgery. In other words, the ad was nothing more than misleading clickbait.

Buried somewhere in the middle of the article was a tiny section about Watson that read as follows:

Emma Watson - Hermione Granger

Finally, the third and final piece of the iconic trio! Hermione Granger, the half muggle half witch who outsmarts everyone - all the time. Harry and Ron may have needed some time to warm up to her, but without her they would have been lost.

Today, actress Emma Watson, is a household name in Hollywood. She has since played the role of Belle in Beauty and the Beast, as well as become a UN Ambassador working towards gender equality. There is so much more of her left to see.

The reason why these kinds of ads and articles exist is something called advertising arbitrage. Advertising arbitrage is a strategy in which an advertiser hopes to make more money on ads displayed in a lengthy article than it would cost to display an initial clickbait ad meant to attract users to the article. In other words, instead of the ads being both attractive and potentially helpful to consumers, they instead mislead users from the start.

Note: If readers would like to report any strange or misleading ads on Snopes, we invite you to contact us. Please include the full link of the website where the questionable ad led to so that we can attempt to investigate and potentially block any such ads.

Sources

Liles, Jordan. “Snopes Tips: How To Avoid Ad Arbitrage Clickbait.” Snopes, 2 Jan. 2022, https://www.snopes.com/articles/387913/avoid-ad-arbitrage-clickbait/.

Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images. “Emma Watson Attends ‘The Circle’ Premiere at Cinema UGC Normandie on June 21, 2017 in Paris, France.” Getty Images, 21 June 2017, www.gettyimages.com/detail/news-photo/emma-watson-attends-the-circle-premiere-at-cinema-ugc-news-photo/699405004.

Sipa via AP Images. “Emma Watson Attends ‘The Circle’ Premiere at Cinema UGC Normandie on June 21, 2017 in Paris, France.” AP Images, 21 June 2017, https://newsroom.ap.org/editorial-photos-videos/detail?itemid=1a175583f8b14376ba6b3c8510e0aa77&mediatype=photo.

Jordan Liles is a Senior Reporter who has been with Snopes since 2016.