logo
Why YouTube is trying to replace your favorite TV shows

Why YouTube is trying to replace your favorite TV shows

Business Insider9 hours ago

A new golf comedy called "Shanked," which follows the hijinks at a country club where employees clash with pampered members, made its debut this month. The first episode runs about 20 minutes and resembles a low-budget comedy you might have once seen on Comedy Central.
But it's not on cable. It's on YouTube.
Welcome to 2025, when the big question in Hollywood isn't whether YouTube can work in the living room, but rather, how much of the entertainment landscape can it conquer.
"Shanked" isn't the only scripted show on YouTube, with top creators like Dhar Mann and Alan Chikin Chow making TV-like series for the platform.
Meanwhile, streamers like Netflix and Amazon's Prime Video are also updating their strategies, both by taking cues from cable TV — with ads and costly live sports — and seeing how they can mine social media for creator talent.
For the creators of "Shanked," YouTube was a no-brainer. Ryan Horrigan of production company London Alley said he saw a lack of low-budget comedies on TV at the same time YouTube was increasingly favoring 20-minute episodic series. Why not a comedy, he thought.
James Lynch, a comedian who co-created and stars in the show, said he felt the lines between entertainment platforms were increasingly blurring.
"We love shows like 'Severance,' but every time I go to a friend's house, there's always something on YouTube," he said.
Google-owned YouTube has nurtured a creator economy that Goldman Sachs estimated would grow to about $480 billion by 2027. Many in the entertainment and advertising world dismissed YouTube as a repository for amateur videos and movie trailers until it became the No. 1 viewed platform on TVs, per Nielsen, ahead of the "real TV" companies Netflix, Disney, and Prime Video.
As YouTube and TV begin to converge, it looks like the Hollywood system as we know it will never be the same. But how the ecosystem will look when the dust settles is much more difficult to parse.
YouTube is encouraging episodic series
Lately, YouTube has been rolling out tools and features to encourage creators to make shows for the living room. It's also doing more to match advertisers to creators to support the kinds of shows you're used to seeing on TV.
At Brandcast, YouTube's big annual presentation to the advertising community, it underlined the point by showing off top creators like IShowSpeed and Michelle Khare, who are making episodic series. And it's making a big push to win an Emmy to prove it can support quality TV.
Viewership is one thing, but advertising, the lifeblood of entertainment, is another. Many major brands still want to be associated with buzzy scripted shows and movies that drive the mainstream conversation, like "The White Lotus," and most creators aren't close to that yet. Only a handful, like MrBeast and Dude Perfect, are making Hollywood-style productions. AI tools could reduce that friction, though, by cutting time and costs from video production.
"Creator content is dominating TV watch time — not just on phones, but on the biggest screens in the house, replacing what used to be traditional television. Yet brands are still spending like it's 2015, chasing impressions over impact," said Nick Cicero, founder of Mondo Metrics, a media measurement company.
Advertisers are closing the gap, though.
Ad holding company giant WPP recently estimated that creators would earn $185 billion between direct brand deals and platform revenue share, surpassing ad spending on TV companies like Disney and Paramount.
Top ad spender Unilever also said it would move to spend 50% of its advertising on social media platforms, up from about 30%, and work with 20 times more influencers.
Can Hollywood adapt?
YouTube's growth could be a problem for Hollywood, which is built on direct ownership of IP and entertainment that moves the culture but costs a ton.
Studios and streamers aren't spending like they were when everyone was trying to catch Netflix, but they still need new stuff to keep viewers coming back and capture younger audiences. Creator-led shows offer one way forward.
But can they pull it off? There are promising signs.
Amazon is the most prominent example of a company betting huge on a creator. It spent more than $100 million to make MrBeast's "Beast Games," which became its most-watched unscripted show, and just renewed it for two more seasons.
Netflix has done deals with The Sidemen, kids' educator Ms. Rachel, and more. Warner Bros. Discovery's HBO Max has a new reality show starring Jake Paul and his brother, Logan, "Paul American." And Disney's Hulu has a hit in "The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives."
Entertainment companies have gotten more sophisticated about how they work with creators. They're tapping them for their ideas rather than simply looking for a piece of their audience, in contrast with some past flopped creator experiments. Netflix is looking at YouTubers as producers as well as on-screen talent, an unscripted agent told Business Insider. NBCUniversal's Peacock just announced a slate of shows developed by creators via an accelerator program. Tubi has an initiative called Stubios to nurture up-and-coming filmmakers.
Media and entertainment companies are also looking at other forms of low-cost content, like soapy mini-dramas and video podcasts.
There are challenges, however.
Creators like YouTube because there's no gatekeeper. It gives them a lot of data, lets them own their content, and gives them a relatively generous 55% cut of the ad revenue.
Creator talent reps told BI some of their clients had walked away from potential Netflix deals because the streamer wouldn't budge from the Hollywood playbook, in which it owns ancillary rights to things like e-commerce revenue.
Scott Purdy, a media consultant at KPMG, said entertainment companies would likely start to look at YouTube and other social platforms as potential places to actually launch shows, starting with low-budget fare.
"For most companies, most options are on the table," he said.
Meanwhile, producers like Horrigan are blue-skying other creator-led formats to put on YouTube.
"Talent is still going to want to play in both sandboxes, but we're moving up the stack," he said. "What's next — is horror going to be a thing on YouTube, teen romance? I think that's going to be a thing as well."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Netflix's New #1 Movie Is An Overlooked, Must-Watch Action Thriller
Netflix's New #1 Movie Is An Overlooked, Must-Watch Action Thriller

Forbes

time24 minutes ago

  • Forbes

Netflix's New #1 Movie Is An Overlooked, Must-Watch Action Thriller

Plane I am guessing there are more than a few people looking at the #1 movie on Netflix right now and being very confused. That movie is 'Plane.' No, not Flight Risk, not Carry-On, not Redeye, not even Snakes on a Plane. Just…Plane. While that title may sound goofy, and the film may be a bit goofy, Plane happens to be an actually kind of great action-thriller. It has a very solid 79% critic score on Rotten Tomatoes with almost two hundred reviews in, but better yet, an amazing 94% critic score, which is a genuine rarity in the space. Here's the premise of the action movie: Gerard Butler has the same power that Jason Statham has, where it seems like he's always making some sort of variant of the same action movie, but they're very watchable and sometimes very good, even if cheesy at times. Butler has starred in two Den of Thieves movies, the Has Fallen series, the OG breakout role 300, and most recently, reprised his How to Train Your Dragon role in live-action for the enormously successful, widely praised adaptation. Top 10 The other half of the coin here is Mike Colter, who you will probably either recognize from the excellent supernatural drama Evil or his time in the MCU as Luke Cage, where it's been hinted that he may return to that part in this new Daredevil: Born Again era. I've never seen him be bad in anything, and that appears to be true in Plane as well. Plane is not a Netflix original despite hitting #1 on the service. It only made $74 million worldwide in theaters, so it was not exactly a blockbuster smash, but it's certainly getting a lot of viewership now. It unseated Tyler Perry's Straw and is ahead of the popular documentary Titan about the Oceangate Submersible disaster. Netflix has been hit or miss when it comes to its action films. Its best offerings are probably the Extraction series, but some of its higher profile attempts, Red Notice and The Gray Man come to mind, have not landed critically. But hey, that's what licensing is for. Check out Plane now, even if it sounds a bit silly. Follow me on Twitter, YouTube, Bluesky and Instagram. Pick up my sci-fi novels the Herokiller series and The Earthborn Trilogy.

REACHER Season 4 Adds 8 New Faces to the Mix
REACHER Season 4 Adds 8 New Faces to the Mix

Geek Girl Authority

timean hour ago

  • Geek Girl Authority

REACHER Season 4 Adds 8 New Faces to the Mix

Reacher Season 4 begins production this week. Eight new cast members — Jay Baruchel, Marc Blucas, Sydelle Noel, Agnez Mo, Anggun, Kevin Weisman, Kevin Corrigan, and Kathleen Robertson — join Alan Ritchson, who plays the titular Jack Reacher. Season 4 will follow the story of Gone Tomorrow , the 13th Reacher novel, published in 2009. Photo Credit: Jasper Savage/Prime Video Prime Video's hit series, Reacher, scored a fourth season renewal in October 2024, four months before Reacher Season 3 premiered. Each season so far has been a fairly accurate adaptation of specific Lee Child novels. The first Jack Reacher novel, The Killing Floor , published in 1997, became Reacher Season 1, while Season 2 jumped ahead to 2007's Bad Luck and Trouble (Jack Reacher #11). Season 3 backtracked to the 2003 novel, Persuader (Jack Reacher #7). RELATED: Read our Reacher Season 3 recaps Earlier this week, Ritchson announced on Instagram that Season 4 will be based on Jack Reacher #13, Gone Tomorrow, first published in 2009. Joining Ritchson for Season 4 are: Jay Baruchel, Sydelle Noel, Agnez Mo, Anggun, Kevin Weisman, Marc Blucas, Kecin Corrigan, and Kathleen Robertson. Who Are They Playing? Amazon teases the Gone Tomorrow plot: 'When a chance encounter with a distraught stranger on a train goes horribly wrong, Jack Reacher is drawn into a complex and deadly game that pits him against ruthless foes from the highest echelons of power.' Based on summaries of the novel, we can sketch out some of the new cast members' roles. Photo Credit:for Netflix Jay Baruchel, seen most recently in FUBAR and heard as Hiccup in the How to Train Your Dragon franchise, plays Jacob Merrick, the brother of the 'distraught stranger' in the description. RELATED: Steven Universe Gets Prime Video Sequel, Lars of the Stars GGA folx will remember Marc Blucas as Riley Finn from Buffy the Vampire Slayer. In the interim 23 years since the days of Riley and The Initiative, he's grown into the Reacher role of John Samson, a Washington politician with a squad of thugs on his payroll. Samson's wife, Elsbeth, is another familiar face. Kathleen Robertson appeared as Rosenfeld Guoliang in The Expanse Season 6. (Personally, I'll always remember her as Clare on Beverly Hills, 90210. ) Reacher Rocks Out A newcomer to North American television, but with a successful and established music career, Agnez Mo portrays Lila Hoth, described in the novel as representing herself as the widow of a Russian oligarch. (Strong possibility here that the Hoths will claim a connection to Indonesian political and military forces, considering the casting.) RELATED: TV Review: Reacher Season 3 Another actress with deep music industry ties, Anggun plays Amisha Hoth. In the novel, when Reacher meets Lila, she is a woman named Svetlana, whom she claims is her mother. As Agnez Mo and Anggun are only 12 years apart in age, their relationship may be rewritten. Photo Credit: Jesse Grant/Peacock Playing Detective Docherty, a New York City homicide detective, Kevin Corrigan hits the beat with a partner named Theresa Lee in the novel. I suspect Theresa is now Tamara Green. If I'm correct, that places Sydelle Noel as Reacher's primary law enforcement ally. We can only hope she'll break out some of her G.L.O.W. moves on the baddies. Axe kick, anyone? RELATED: Geek Girl Authority Crush of the Week: Frances Neagley Kevin Weisman's character, Russell Plum, is the only one without a clear Gone Tomorrow connection. There are several roles he could slide into easily. The Samsons have a head of security named Mr. Springfield in the book. Federal agents dog Reacher's steps throughout the plot. Plum could be wholly invented or borrowed from another book (like Maria Sten's Neagley) to fill in Reacher's social circle. Photo Credit: Jasper Savage/Prime Video Speaking of Neagley Maria Sten announced on Instagram a week ago that Neagley, the Reacher spin-off series, wrapped shooting. That puts it on track for a late 2025 or early 2026 release. Alan Ritchson guest stars as Reacher, returning the favor by helping out the way Neagley did in Seasons 2 and 3 of his show. All three seasons of Reacher are now streaming on Prime Video. THE RINGS OF POWER Brings 3 New Cast Members to Middle-earth for Season 3 Diana lives in Vancouver, BC, Canada, where she invests her time and energy in teaching, writing, parenting, and indulging her love of all Trek and a myriad of other fandoms. She is a lifelong fan of smart sci-fi and fantasy media, an upstanding citizen of the United Federation of Planets, and a supporter of AFC Richmond 'til she dies. Her guilty pleasures include female-led procedurals, old-school sitcoms, and Bluey. She teaches, knits, and dreams big. You can also find her writing at The Televixen, Women at Warp, TV Fanatic, and TV Goodness.

Dakota Johnson calls Hollywood ‘a mess,' blasts studios for remaking ‘the same things'
Dakota Johnson calls Hollywood ‘a mess,' blasts studios for remaking ‘the same things'

New York Post

time2 hours ago

  • New York Post

Dakota Johnson calls Hollywood ‘a mess,' blasts studios for remaking ‘the same things'

Dakota Johnson is putting Hollywood on blast. The actress, 35, called the industry 'a mess'' in a scathing critique of Hollywood during a recent appearance on 'Hot Ones' for her 'Materialists' press tour. 'I think it's hard when creative decisions are made by committee and it's hard when creative decisions are made by people who don't even really watch movies or know anything about them, and that tends to be what's occurring a lot,' Johnson said when asked by host Sean Evans why 'Hollywood is risk-averse.' 8 Dakota Johnson on 'Hot Ones.' First We Feast/YouTube 8 Dakota Johnson calls Hollywood 'a mess' on 'Hot Ones.' First We Feast/YouTube Johnson continued: 'When something does well, studios want to keep that going so they remake the same things, but humans don't want that. They want fresh, they want to feel new things, experience new things, see new things.' 'So I don't know,' she added. 'I guess it's all just a bit of a mess right now, isn't it?' 8 Dakota Johnson attends the 'Materialists' screening in New York City on June 7. GC Images Last year, Johnson's Marvel movie 'Madame Web' famously flopped, leading her to call out the 'committee' behind the film. 8 Dakota Johnson on the set of 'Madame Web' in New York City in Oct. 2022. Robert O\'Neil / 'It wasn't my fault,' she told the Los Angeles Times earlier this month. 'There's this thing that happens now where a lot of creative decisions are made by committee. Or made by people who don't have a creative bone in their body. And it's really hard to make art that way. Or to make something entertaining that way.' Johnson added, 'And I think unfortunately with 'Madame Web,' it started out as something and turned into something else. And I was just sort of along for the ride at that point. But that happens. Bigger-budget movies fail all the time.' 8 Dakota Johnson filming 'Madame Web' with Celeste O'Connor, Sydney Sweeney and Isabela Merced. Jose Perez/ / MEGA 8 Dakota Johnson on the set of 'Madame Web' in October 2022. SteveSands/NewYorkNewswire/MEGA In a March 2024 interview with Bustle, Johnson blamed the studio system for the ways in which it produces movies. 'Films are made by a filmmaker and a team of artists around them. You cannot make art based on numbers and algorithms,' she stated. 'My feeling has been for a long time that audiences are extremely smart, and executives have started to believe that they're not.' 8 Dakota Johnson in 'Materialists.' Courtesy Everett Collection 8 Dakota Johnson and Chris Evans in 'Materialists.' AP 'Audiences will always be able to sniff out bulls–t,' the 'Fifty Shades' star noted. 'Even if films start to be made with AI, humans aren't going to f—ing want to see those.' In 'Materialists,' Johnson plays a New York City matchmaker who finds herself in a love triangle with her perfect match (Pedro Pascal) and her long lost love (Chris Evans). 'Materialists' is in theaters now.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store