TikTok Shutdown – What Happens Now?

This week – What happens to the TikTok ban, please no more MCNs, have we reached peak creator brands and much more! Plus come to my meetup in Lisbon this week at Web Summit!

Hi, I’m Jim Louderback and this is my weekly creator economy newsletter. If you’ve received it, then you are either subscribed or someone forwarded it to you.

If the latter – and you want to subscribe, get it here!

  

TIKTOK BAN – WHAT NOW

With President Donald Trump returning to office on January 20th, what’s the fate of the PAFACA law, which orders TikTok to divest or shutdown in the US? The law itself goes into effect on January 19th – pending the Dec 6 findings of TikTok’s circuit court appeal. Assuming it’s enacted, it can only be invalidated by passing ANOTHER law in congress. Expect TikTok to continue the appeal to the Supreme Court, which will likely also slow things down until spring or summer. The wild card? What will President Trump do. @Rich Greenfield and his team explore the scenarios and how it might affect Meta, YouTube, Snap and others. Might have to update my TikTok Countdown Clock.

  

THE ANSWER IS ALWAYS NO

I love that my friend Mike Shields has a new newsletter called Next in Creator Media (worth a sub!). But the answer to “Is it time for the MCN to return” is no. If you didn’t know, I built one of the first MCNs (Revision3) and sold it to Discovery. If you think it’s hard to build a creator business on rented land, building a creator network on rented land is near impossible. Build a big enough network and the platforms become incented to see you fail. There are other collaborative creator models that might succeed – but even today’s “MCN” companies have realized they need to pivot to services and SAAS – or to old-school management agencies – to be successful. Also check out Mike’s new Next in Creator Media podcast featuring Whalar’s president of Measurement and Analytics. Our sponsor Whalar Group highlighted it in this issue below too (that’s called coincidental synergy folks).

 

CALLING IT: WE’VE REACHED PEAK CREATOR BRAND

Yes, creator brands have flooded Walmart and other places. But even the most hyped have a life-cycle shorter than many YouTubers. Walmart co-hosted a creator upfront two weeks ago, but I detect a whiff of desperation in the move. We’re all starting to get just a little sick of these overhyped, in-it-to-win-it creator brands. I’m not down on the IDEA of creators launching products, just that we may have primed the pump way too hard. Pun intended, as Prime Hydration and others seem to be fading. What’s a creator business to do? Lean into quality and build things that make sense for YOUR community (like what Mark Vins will soon launch), rather than trying to boil the ocean. Or build digital goods, SAAS, or find a traditional brand to partner with and launch things together. I fear there’s a reckoning to come – and mold on Lunchly could be just the start.

  • Related: Creator commerce company Amaze merges with Fresh Vine wine to help creators launch custom alcohol brands. I’m calling it now – Drunkables will be the next big Beast brand. What could possibly go wrong?

  

MIXED RESULTS FROM THE “CREATOR ECONOMY ELECTION

In case you didn’t hear, the US elected a president last week. I shy away from politics here, but it’s notable that the creator economy took center stage during the lead up and on the night of the US election. Traditional TV ratings were way down, and YouTube was the big winner, streaming 67 million hours of content. Podcasts also seemed to take center stage as candidates leaned into the intimate format as part of their pivot to the creator economy. @Reed Duchscher spent election night shambling about on social, finding that news has fundamentally shifted from older media to streaming video. @peter Kafka calls it “The YouTube Election ($). And The Atlantic weighs in with a lengthy analysis concluding that we are all the media (old take but more true today than ever). There’s clearly no going back. But it turns out that the FYP feeds on TikTok, Threads and other platforms failed to deliver timely updates, causing backlash among users. And ChatGPT failed to debunk misinformation as well (unlike similar services). I hope both will be fixed before the next big contest.

    


SPONSOR: On the latest episode of Next in Creator Media, Whalar’s President of Measurement and Analytics, Gaz Alushi, dives into the critical question: Are brands investing enough in Creators? Gaz discusses the underestimated ROI  Creators bring, with Nielsen data revealing they can deliver a remarkable 2.4x ROI. He also explores the importance of measuring Creator impact like traditional media, the need for planning and attribution in campaign measurement, and how tailoring content to platform-specific audiences can drive results. Listen now!


  

QUIBIS:

YOUTUBE

 

META

  

TIKTOK

  

OTHER CREATOR ECONOMY

  

CREATOR TECH – AI, WEB3, VR, MORE

 

  

INSIDE THE BOOKTUBE FANDOM

   by Morgan Ward

You’ve heard of #BookTok, but did you know about BookTube? Surprise, it’s YouTubers talking about books. Creators cover all genres of literature – everything from high fantasy and trashy romance to non-fiction essays and memoirs. Unlike BookTok, which revels in a never ending cycle of short-form controversy, BookTube is an easy, comforting community. Creators post hour long vlogs documenting their reading habits and participate in book related challenges, including “I read every book I saw people reading on the train” and “I read the most popular books on Goodreads”.

Creators build familiarity through friendly conversation and adopting the easy conviviality of a book club. Creators also host actual clubs on sites like Fable or on their Patreon. For brands, BookTube provides an easy way to reach a sympatico audience. Regular sponsors include Book of the Month and DR brands like Squarespace. Need to escape? BookTube has you covered.

Go Deeper by Following these top BookTubers:

  • Jack Edwards covers a wide range of genres on his main channel and vlogs his reading habits on his second one.
  • The witty Lexi (aka newlynova) is on BookTube and BookTok where she covers the filthiest (her words) books you don’t want to be caught reading.
  • OG creator A Clockwork Reader focuses on niche book recommendations. From vague (“a book that will make me cry”) to hyper-specific (“Books that remind me of Avatar the Last Airbender”), Hannah has a book for you.
  • In her own words, With Cindy is “the perfect combination of literature analysis and depression.” She’s one of the funniest BookTube creators has expanded into film and lifestyle videos as well.
  • An American living in Seoul, Cari Can Read is the second channel for Cari Cakes where she offers a more international look at BookTube. Her third channel features book-related music playlists to accompany your reading sessions.

  

Me this week: I’m at Web Summit all this week in Lisbon. You’ll find me hosting the New Media Summit stage Tuesday, and hanging around otherwise. Ping me if you want to say hi, and come to my meetup on Thursday!

   

100% written by me – no human or AI ghostwriters were involved in the production (except for the cover art!). Like this free newsletter? Buy me a coffee and say thanks! Or let’s do a meetup in your town.

I’ve built and sold multiple creator economy startups to top media companies – including Discovery and Paramount. Subscribe here on LinkedIn to get this newsletter every Monday.

Let me know what you think – email me at jim@louderback.com. Thanks for reading and see you around the internet.

 

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