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Today β€” 8 March 2025News

'Hot Ones' host Sean Evans is 'sick of' having to explain to advertisers why his hit YouTube show is comparable to TV

8 March 2025 at 19:36
AUSTIN, TEXAS - MARCH 08: (L-R) Clayton Davis, Sean Evans, and Rhett James McLaughlin speak during the Variety Podcasting Brunch Presented By YouTube at Austin Proper Hotel on March 08, 2025 in Austin, Texas. (Photo by Marcus Ingram/Variety via Getty Images)
Sean Evans, host of 10-year-old 'Hot Ones,' used to worry about the show's survival.

Marcus Ingram/Variety via Getty Images

  • Sean Evans criticized advertisers for undervaluing YouTube's 'Hot Ones' compared to shows on TV.
  • YouTube is challenging traditional TV, yet some advertisers still ignore it.
  • He said 'Hot Ones' success highlights YouTube's influence, despite initial fears of cancellation.

Sean Evans, the host of chicken wing-eating talk show "Hot Ones," said he's "sick of" having to make the case for his popular YouTube series to advertisers who still think of the platform as lesser than TV.

"The hurdle that I think we all want brands to get over is this idea that there's some difference between eyeballs that exist on YouTube versus eyeballs that exist on linear TV," Evans said, speaking on a creator panel presented by YouTube at SXSW.

"It's absolutely worthy of comparison and competition with all of those other shows, and in a lot of ways in those categories, it dunks on those shows," he said. "That's sometimes a hard thing for brands to wrap their heads around, but it's just an observable fact that is plainly obvious, and I'm kind of, like, sick of having to explain that over and over again."

YouTube has become the top TV viewing destination for two years running, according to Nielsen, on the strength of independent creators, increasingly threatening legacy Hollywood players and causing some to play catch up and look for their own creator-fronted shows.

However, some blue-chip advertisers still consider the platform less valuable than traditional TV, owing to its many user-generated videos.

Evans is one of the earliest and most successful YouTubers. Started 10 years ago, "Hot Ones" grew out of Complex Media, which became part of BuzzFeed in 2021. Over the years, it's hosted guests like Margot Robbie, Scarlett Johansson, and Gordon Ramsey. He and an investor group bought First We Feast, the studio behind "Hot Ones," last year from BuzzFeed in an $82.5 million deal.

During the session, Evans expressed his worry about the show being canceled in its early days.

"It wasn't a big hit at first, and I used to joke with Chris [Schonberger, 'Hot Ones' cocreator] all the time about how we're eating this really spicy food and no one cares at all," he said. "If this were on a network or something like that, we probably would have been canceled before we never got a chance to figure out exactly what the show was and what it meant."

He also talked about his passion for reading viewers' comments, which he uses to stay connected to the audience.

"I always go through the comments," he said. "There's Nielsen ratings or whatever, but you don't have that two-way street. That is kind of a drug to me. It's actually a dopamine hit that I really look forward to every week. "

Evans also explained how he prepares for interviews. Depending on the guest, he listens to their music, watches their movies, or reads their books.

"You just dive into the material as much as you can," he said. "After you have kind of an idea of who this person is, see if you can extract an interview of that, and then do a little armchair psychology sit-down with the person."

He also revealed there's no special sauce to dealing with the aftereffects of consuming all the hot wings.

"I just ride it out, you know. I think about, you know, as painful and miserable as it could be sometimes, as uncomfortable as it is, it's a whole lot better than my life before it," he said.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Scott Galloway says tech CEOs are playing what he calls 'cowardice domino'

By: Lloyd Lee
8 March 2025 at 18:14
Scott Galloway
NYU professor Scott Galloway provided his predictions for 2025 and criticized tech CEOs during his talk at SXSW in Austin.

Mike Jordan/SXSW Conference & Festivals via Getty Images

  • Scott Galloway, host of The Prof G Pod, ripped into tech CEOs during his SXSW talk on Saturday.
  • Galloway said tech leaders are playing "dominos of cowardice," each one following the other.
  • He said he refused to normalize actions taken by Elon Musk.

Since Donald Trump's victory, tech CEOs have graced the President's inauguration, Jeff Bezos overhauled The Washington Post's op-ed section, and X CEO Linda Yaccarino reportedly pressed one of the world's biggest ad groups to increase spending on Elon Musk's X.

What do these seemingly disparate events have in common?

Scott Galloway, NYU Stern marketing professor and host of The Prof G Pod, said business leaders β€” particularly tech CEOs β€” are complacently participating in America's "slow road to fascism."

During his SXSW talk on Saturday in Austin, Galloway said tech leaders enormously influence society and that their "character matters."

But so far, Galloway said, "We have seen an extraordinary kind of what I call 'cowardice domino,'" displaying a slide image of prominent tech leaders represented as said dominos, including Jeff Bezos, Satya Nadella, Sam Altman, Mark Zuckerberg, Sundar Pichai, Musk, Tim Cook, and Yaccarino.

Spokespeople for The Washington Post, Microsoft, OpenAI, Meta, Alphabet, and Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Galloway said examples of the "dominos of cowardice" included business leaders texting his co-host on the tech podcast Pivot, Kara Swisher, that they "hate to be at the inauguration, but I'm doing it for shareholders."

He continued: "And this effectively emboldens the CEO of X to then demand that IPG advertise on her platform; otherwise, she will get her boss to block the merger. Which leads to one of the world's wealthiest men, who owns one of the most important newspapers, to say, 'We're no longer going to talk about opinion.' There is one kind of fascist domino following one after the other."

Galloway appeared to be referring to a recent Wall Street Journal report that said Yaccarino and her associates had pushed Interpublic Group, a large advertising company, to advertise on X. The pressure comes as IPG seeks a deal to sell itself to its competitor Omnicom. The deal could need regulatory approval from the Trump administration, with which Musk works closely.

Musk and a spokesperson for X did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Galloway took a moment to single out Musk and his recent gesture at Trump's inauguration, which some have interpreted as a fascist salute.

"I had a running loop of Musk doing the Nazi salute, and I thought, 'I refuse to normalize this bullshit,'" he said. "Think about what money has done to us."

Read the original article on Business Insider

White House envoy to travel to Doha to push for new Gaza deal

8 March 2025 at 17:04

White House envoy Steve Witkoff is expected to travel to Doha on Tuesday evening in an effort to broker a new hostage-release and ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas, two U.S. officials said.

Why it matters: The talks would be the first since President Trump took office and since the original agreement between Israel and Hamas that established a 42-day ceasefire in Gaza in exchange for the release of 33 hostages in its first phase, which ended one week ago.


  • Witkoff is expected to join Qatari and Egyptian mediators and negotiators from Israel and Hamas who will begin talks on Monday.
  • The Trump administration is pushing for a deal that would lead to the release of all remaining hostages, extend the ceasefire until after the Muslim holy month of Ramadan and the Jewish holiday of Passover and possibly lead to a long-term truce that would end the war.
  • Hamas is still holding 59 hostages in Gaza. The Israel Defense Forces have confirmed 35 are dead. Israeli intelligence believes 22 are still alive and the status of two others is unknown.
  • Among the remaining hostages are five Americans, including 21-year-old Edan Alexander who is believed to be alive.

Driving the news: Axios reported earlier this week that Trump's envoy for hostage affairs Adam Boehler has been holding direct talks with Hamas officials. Their last meeting took place last Tuesday.

  • During the talks, Boehler discussed the possible release of Alexander and the remains of four other American hostages as a way to launch a broader deal on the release of all remaining hostages and a long term truce.

State of play: Witkoff is expected to travel to Doha after participating in a meeting between U.S. and Ukrainian officials in Saudi Arabia on Tuesday.

  • It is unclear if he is going to meet with Hamas officials or only with Israeli negotiators and Qatari and Egyptian mediators.
  • A senior Israeli official said Witkoff wanted to get all the parties in one place for several days of intense negotiations in an effort to reach a deal.

A Hamas delegation held talks in Cairo on Saturday with the director of the Egyptian intelligence service about the Gaza ceasefire and hostage deal.

  • Hamas said in a statement it urges all parties to implement their commitment to the original deal and begin negotiations over its second phase immediately. Israel has so far refused to seriously discuss the second phase of the deal.
  • Hamas also said it stressed to the Egyptian officials that it is ready to form a committee of "national independent personalities" to govern Gaza until elections are held. Such a step would mean Hamas would give up its control over the civilian governance in Gaza.

What to watch: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu held a meeting with a group of senior ministers and the heads of the security services on Saturday to discuss the next steps in the Gaza deal.

  • "Israel has accepted the invitation of the mediators backed by the U.S., and will send a delegation to Doha on Monday in an effort to advance the negotiations," the Prime Minister's Office said in a statement at the end of the meeting.

Reddit is cracking down on users who upvote violent content

8 March 2025 at 16:09
Reddit
Reddit is rolling out new rules to crack down on users who upvote content that violates the site's rules.

Illustration by Mateusz Slodkowski/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

  • Reddit will now warn users about upvoting content that violates site rules.
  • Reddit has one of the fastest-growing user bases of social sites.
  • Tensions rose recently on Reddit over criticism of Elon Musk and posts about Luigi Mangione.

Worried that upvoting a sensitive post on Reddit could get you in trouble? Now, it just might.

Reddit's user base is growing rapidly as it is being hailed as one of the last truly "social" places online. Still, with growth comes volatility, and Reddit is now cracking down on users who interact with content that violates the site's rules.

In a post on Wednesday, the site's administrators said that Reddit users who upvote "several pieces of content banned for violating our policies" within a short period will receive a warning. Reddit said it made the change because the site relies on "engaged users" to downvote bad content and report potentially violative content.

"Upvoting bad or violating content interferes with this system," the post says.

The company says this policy is currently limited to a warning but is considering "adding additional actions down the road."

"Voting comes with responsibility," the post says. "This will have no impact on the vast majority of users as most already downvote or report abusive content."

One Reddit user said in a post on Friday that Reddit's description of "violent content" in the new policy seemed too broad.

"What if I strongly dislike a fictional character from a television show or video game and want to express that in a hyperbolic way?" the post reads. "Now we have to dance around what we say and be paranoid that we'll be banned?

Reddit does have broad rules for violent content. Still, the site's policy says that users can post violent content if it is "educational, newsworthy, artistic, satire, documentary, etc."

Last month, Reddit temporarily shut down the popular community r/whitepeopletwitter after several users made threatening comments against Elon Musk and the Department of Government Efficiency.

Tensions between Reddit users and Musk grew in January after the moderators of over 100 subreddits moved to ban links to X following Musk's speech at President Donald Trump's inauguration, where he made a gesture that some interpreted as a fascist salute.

Reddit told BI at the time of the temporary ban that it wants its communities used for "civil discussion" and "one of the few places online where people can exchange ideas and perspectives."

"We want to ensure that they continue to be a place for healthy debate no matter the topic," the company said in a statement. "Debate and dissent are welcome on Reddit β€” threats and doxxing are not."

However, Reddit's content moderation system has not been without flaws.Β Reddit moderatorsΒ said this week that the system flags the name "Luigi" for violent content, even when it is used in non-violent contexts. On Thursday, moderators for the popular subreddit r/popculture said they were forced to shut down the forum due to the censorship from Reddit's moderation system in a post.

Reddit did not immediately return a request for comment from Business Insider about the content moderation system. A spokesperson for the company told The Verge that Reddit does not have a "sitewide filter for the word 'Luigi' or expectation that users stop talking about Luigi Mangione," according to the outlet.

Luigi Mangione, 26, is the Ivy-league grad suspect charged with shooting and killing United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson in December 2024.

Reddit told The Verge that r/popculture recently fell to just one moderator, allowing the subreddit to filter out potentially sensitive words automatically. The community's moderator told BI that they did not make a list of possibly sensitive words and said they think Reddit's content moderation is inconsistent.

"I've reported so many comments of people calling me or other people the f-slur, and Reddit tells me it doesn't violate their policies, but saying 'Luigi' does," the moderator said.

Reddit cofounder Alexis Ohanian, who left the company in 2020, said last week that he thinks the future of social media will be moderated by AI, where users have "sliders" to "choose their level of tolerance" about certain topics.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Disney execs teased upcoming theme park features at SXSW, from 'Star Wars' to the 'Fantastic Four'

Pete Docter, Asa Kalama, Leslie Evans, Bruce Vaughn, Robert Downey Jr., Alan Bergman, Jon Favreau, Josh D'Amaro, Michael Hundgen, Kevin Feige at the Featured Session "The Future of World-Building at Disney" during SXSW Conference & Festivals in the Austin Convention Center on March 8, 2025 in Austin, Texas. (Photo by Mike Jordan/SXSW Conference & Festivals via Getty Images)
Disney execs and Robert Downey Jr. discussed how Disney builds franchises at SXSW.

Mike Jordan/SXSW Conference & Festivals via Getty Images

  • Disney execs teased upcoming theme park features at SXSW.
  • They touted Disney's storytelling and tech collaboration with Robert Downey Jr. and others.
  • Disney's parks face competition from Universal's Epic Universe opening in May.

Two years after Disney announced a $60 billion, 10-year expansion of its theme parks and cruise businesses, the entertainment giant is sharing more details about new features coming to its parks.

Alan Bergman, co-chairman of Disney Entertainment, and Josh D'Amaro, chairman of Disney Parks, Experiences, and Products, appeared onstage in a packed ballroom at Austin's South by Southwest culture festival on Saturday.

They were joined by a parade of other Disney stars, most notably Robert Downey Jr., who is trading in his Iron Man suit for Doctor Doom's uniform in "Avengers: Doomsday" and "Avengers: Secret Wars." "Avengers: Doomsday" will hit theaters in May 2026 and "Avengers: Secret Wars" will premiere in May 2027.

Also appearing were "The Mandalorian" creator Jon Favreau and a gaggle of pint-sized droids; Pete Docter, chief creative officer of Pixar; and Kevin Feige, president of Marvel Studios.

Here are the biggest reveals from Disney's SXSW panel.

Star Wars

Disney shared that Walt Disney World's Millennium Falcon: Smuggler's Run attraction, where people get to see what it's like to ride in the iconic spaceship, would be getting an upgrade, with "a brand new story" about the film's characters. Execs described how they used artwork from the Star Wars universe to create a "fully immersive experience" where guests "are fully in control of their own destiny."

Execs also hinted that Disney would extend Star Wars and other franchises online with its investment in Epic Games, the creator of "Fortnite." Meanwhile, Star Wars-inspired droids will visit Disney's theme parks in Tokyo, Paris, and Orlando later in the year.

Pixar

Docter shared two projects Pixar has in the works for Disney World: a land inspired by "Monsters, Inc." called Monstropolis and what was touted as Disney's first suspended roller coaster ride, which reimagines one of the movie's scenes.

Another feature based on "Cars" will create an off-road attraction in a spin on the movie, taking riders geyser-dodging over rocky terrain.

Marvel

At Disneyland, the Fantastic Four characters will visit the park this summer. "The Fantastic Four: First Steps" will debut in theaters on July 25 as part of phase six of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, or MCU. Disney is also doubling the size of its Avengers campus in California with two new attractions β€” Avengers: Infinity Defense and Stark Flight Lab.

Avengers: Infinity Defense will let guests battle alongside Black Panther and Ant-Man to fight Thanos.

Downey discussed Stark Flight Lab, an attraction that takes fans into the character's workshop. The actor said he gave Disney's Imagineering team input about the ride, which will now include DUM-E, a nod to Tony Stark's robot assistant in the franchise.

Disney's enduring franchises

Bergman and D'Amaro, along with Dana Walden, Bergman's cochair, have both been floated as potentialΒ successors for Disney CEO Bob Iger.Β Their public appearances are regularly scrutinized for what they imply about who might be ahead in the succession race.

Both men took turns finishing each other's sentences to emphasize that Disney's big, enduring franchises are the product of collaboration across teams and work enabled by technology but rooted in storytelling.

According to Nielsen, Disney's streaming businessΒ trails digital giants YouTube and NetflixΒ in terms of viewing time. But none matches Disney's franchise-building ability, which has spawned a diversified global entertainment empire.

"We truly have something for everyone, with so many ways to experience it," D'Amaro said, calling this an "unprecedented era" of creating attractions, shows, and games. "This also has strong connections with our audience, which is so unique to Disney. We're constantly developing new tools that allow us to tell our stories in even more compelling ways."

Disney's behind-the-scenes look comes as one of its largest competitors, Universal, is also expanding domestically. This May, Universal Orlando Resorts' new theme park, Epic Universe, will welcome guests to explore five separate "worlds" β€” including Super Nintendo World.

Disney executives have navigated questions about how the arrival of Epic Universe could impact the company, including during a 2024 earnings call when CFO Hugh Johnston said it could be "beneficial."

"The early bookings that we have next summer are actually positive," Johnston said.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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