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YouTube TV and Disney Reach Deal Ending Two-Week Blackout of ESPN, ABC
TV & Streaming

YouTube TV and Disney Reach Deal Ending Two-Week Blackout of ESPN, ABC

by jummy84 November 15, 2025
written by jummy84

ESPN, ABC and other Disney TV networks are coming back to YouTube TV.

Google and Disney finally ended their standoff, announcing a multiyear agreement Friday on pricing and terms for a renewed carriage deal for YouTube TV. Disney’s nets went dark on the internet TV service just before midnight ET on Thursday, Oct. 30, after the two sides remained far apart on a deal before the expiration of the previous contract.

Under the new agreement, ESPN’s full lineup of sports — including content from ESPN Unlimited — will be made available on YouTube TV to base-plan subscribers at no additional cost by the end of 2026. In addition, access to a selection of live and on-demand programming from ESPN Unlimited will be available inside YouTube TV.

The deal also lets YouTube include the Disney+ and Hulu bundle as part of “select YouTube offerings.” According to Disney, “select networks” will be included in various genre-specific packages that YouTube TV expects to launch in the future.

“This new agreement reflects our continued commitment to delivering exceptional entertainment and evolving with how audiences choose to watch,’’ Disney Entertainment co-chairmen Alan Bergman and Dana Walden and ESPN chairman Jimmy Pitaro said in a joint statement. “It recognizes the tremendous value of Disney’s programming and provides YouTube TV subscribers with more flexibility and choice. We are pleased that our networks have been restored in time for fans to enjoy the many great programming options this weekend, including college football.”

In a statement, a YouTube spokesperson said Friday, “We’re happy to share that we’ve reached an agreement with Disney that preserves the value of our service for our subscribers and future flexibility in our offers. Subscribers should see channels including ABC, ESPN and FX returning to their service over the course of the day, as well as any recordings that were previously in their Library. We apologize for the disruption and appreciate our subscribers’ patience as we negotiated on their behalf. ”

The deal supersedes their prior distribution agreement, inked in December 2021 after a two-day blackout.

On Sunday (Nov. 9) YouTube began issuing one-time $20 credits to YouTube TV customers for the loss of Disney’s programming, in the hopes it would help stave off user cancelations.

Many YouTube TV subscribers dropped the service in frustration. According to a survey fielded last week, 24% of YouTube TV users said they had canceled or intended to cancel their accounts over the Disney blackout. A YouTube rep said that “while subscriber churn is always regrettable, it’s been manageable and does not align with the findings of this survey.” Disney took a hit, too, losing more than $4 million per day during the blackout, according to an estimate by Morgan Stanley analysts.

Google had said Disney was asking for an unprecedented fee increase for the full suite of ESPN channels, ABC local stations, FX, Disney Channel, Freeform, Nat Geo and more — while Disney claimed the tech giant was “refusing to pay fair rates for our channels.” According to Google, Disney was trying to “reset” the market pricing for its programming (so it could charge similarly higher rates in upcoming renewals with other pay-TV distributors) and that Disney was insisting YouTube TV take the Mouse House’s full lineup of networks. The negotiating teams were led by Disney Platform Distribution EVP Sean Breen and YouTube chief business officer Mary Ellen Coe.

The removal of Disney’s networks from YouTube TV came a day before a busy Nov. 1 Saturday slate for college football as major marquee teams face pivotal contests, many of them aired on ESPN and ABC. In light of the blackout, ESPN made its “College GameDay” football pregame show available free to watch via a livestream on X. YouTube TV customers also missed two airings of “Monday Night Football” on ABC and ESPN. (YouTube pointed out to users they could catch all of ESPN’s programming on the ESPN Unlimited subscription service.)

Along with Disney’s live channels, YouTube TV customers’ DVR recordings of the media conglomerate’s programming were removed, as is standard in such disputes. With the deal renewal, YouTube TV subscribers will regain access to recordings that were previously in their library, according to YouTube.

On Thursday, Disney CEO Bob Iger told analysts that the company had been “working tirelessly to close this deal” but said, “It’s also imperative that we make sure that we agree to a deal that reflects the value that we deliver, which both YouTube, by the way, and Alphabet, have told us, is greater than the value of any other provider.”

Disney Entertainment’s Walden and Bergman and ESPN’s Pitaro had previously addressed the impasse in several memos to staffers. “YouTube TV and its owner, Google, are not interested in achieving a fair deal with us,” the execs wrote in an Oct. 31 email. “Instead, they want to use their power and extraordinary resources to eliminate competition and devalue the very content that helped them build their service.”

Meanwhile, ahead of this year’s Election Night (Nov. 4), Disney asked Google to restore ABC on YouTube TV for one day to serve the “public interest.” Google declined — and instead suggested that Disney allow YouTube TV to make ABC and ESPN available while the two sides continued talks because those are “the channels that people want.” Disney didn’t go for the idea.

The Disney-Google clash became public Oct. 23, when Disney began alerting viewers that its networks could be removed from YouTube TV.

Disney has faced other tough negotiations with distributors amid the transition to ESPN Unlimited — the standalone streaming service launched in August that includes everything on the sports programmer’s lineup — and its continued investment in Disney+ and Hulu.

In 2023, Disney’s networks had a 10-day blackout on Charter Communications cable systems in a similar fight over price. To settle the Charter deal, Disney allowed Charter’s high-tier TV subscribers to access Disney+ and the ESPN+ streaming app. In 2024, ESPN and other Disney nets went dark on DirecTV for nearly two weeks before they reached a new deal. In October, Disney and Comcast quietly reached a carriage renewal deal.

Google has encountered no small amount of friction in deal-renewal talks this year for YouTube TV. Other programmers that have fought with the internet company include Paramount Global (now Paramount Skydance), Fox Corp. and NBCUniversal — each of which reached a new deal without a blackout. At the end of September, YouTube TV dropped Univision, with Google alleging the price increases sought by parent company TelevisaUnivision were drastically out of line with viewership on the platform.

YouTube TV is the biggest internet-TV service in the U.S., estimated to have more than 10 million subscribers. Next is Disney, which last week closed a deal to merge its Hulu + Live TV business with Fubo; together, those have almost 6 million subs in North America. Google had asserted Disney’s hardball tactics over a YouTube TV deal was “benefiting their own live TV products, including Hulu + Live TV and Fubo.”

November 15, 2025 0 comments
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Disney And YouTube TV Reach Carriage Deal, Ending 15-Day Standoff
TV & Streaming

Disney And YouTube TV Reach Carriage Deal, Ending 15-Day Standoff

by jummy84 November 15, 2025
written by jummy84

Disney and YouTube TV have reached a carriage agreement, ending a pitched battle that dragged on for 15 days, frustrating consumers and fascinating the media business.

Included in the multi-year pact are carriage of ABC and ESPN, a portfolio of other networks. The Unlimited tier of ESPN’s new direct-to-consumer streaming outlet will also be included at no extra charge for YouTube TV’s 10 million subscribers. The bundle of Disney+ and Hulu will also be made available in “select YouTube offerings,” the companies said, and certain networks will also be part of genre-specific packages.

The genre packages and access to the new ESPN streaming service, which launched in August as a major hedge against cord-cutting, had been on the priority list for Disney negotiators for months. While comments by executives largely centered on disputes over pricing and fair market value, a sticking point in the negotiations – ingestion – reflected the complexities of the streaming era. The new pact includes a form of ingestion, but not into YouTube’s channel store. Content from ESPN Unlimited will be incorporated into the user experience of YouTube TV, allowing subscribers to view it within the app as opposed to having to jump out to the ESPN app.

“This new agreement reflects our continued commitment to delivering exceptional entertainment and evolving with how audiences choose to watch,’’ Disney Entertainment Co-Chairmen Alan Bergman and Dana Walden and ESPN Chairman Jimmy Pitaro. “It recognizes the tremendous value of Disney’s programming and provides YouTube TV subscribers with more flexibility and choice. We are pleased that our networks have been restored in time for fans to enjoy the many great programming options this weekend, including college football.”

YouTube TV, which has grown into one of the top U.S. pay-TV providers since launching in 2017, will restore programming, including titles stored on cloud DVRs, from Disney over the next 24 hours. The restoration came in time for viewers to be able to tune in for a packed college football slate and Monday Night Football‘s Dallas Cowboys-Las Vegas Raiders game. At 15 days, the blackout was the longest ever for Disney and was threatening to extend a drought of college football to a third weekend in the prime of the season.

“We’re happy to share that we’ve reached an agreement with Disney that preserves the value of our service for our subscribers and future flexibility in our offers,” a YouTube spokesperson said in a statement. “Subscribers should see channels including ABC, ESPN and FX returning to their service over the course of the day, as well as any recordings that were previously in their Library. We apologize for the disruption and appreciate our subscribers’ patience as we negotiated on their behalf. “

November 15, 2025 0 comments
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Bob Iger on Disney Deal Standoff With YouTube TV 'Working Tirelessly'
TV & Streaming

Bob Iger on Disney Deal Standoff With YouTube TV ‘Working Tirelessly’

by jummy84 November 13, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s two weeks into the YouTube TV blackout of Disney networks — including ESPN and ABC — and the Mouse House’s top brass say they’re hunkering down to fight for as long as it takes to reach terms that are acceptable to the media company.

Disney CEO Bob Iger, speaking on the company’s September quarter earnings call, said, “We care deeply about our consumer and our priority has always been to remain on their service without interruption, to close a deal on a timely basis so that interruption does not occur. The deal that we have proposed is equal to or better than what other large distributors have already agreed to. So we’re not trying to really break any new ground, and while we’ve been working tirelessly to close this deal and restore our channel to the platform. It’s also imperative that we make sure that we agree to a deal that reflects the value that we deliver, which both YouTube, by the way, and Alphabet, have told us, is greater than the value of any other provider.”

Iger continued, “So we’re not trying to break new ground. The offer that’s on the table is commensurate with deals that we’ve already struck with, actually distributors that are larger than they are. We’re trying really hard, as I said, working tirelessly to close this deal, and we’re hope, we were hopeful that we’ll be able to do so on a timely enough basis to at least give consumers the opportunity to access our content over their platform.”

Disney CFO Hugh Johnston, in an interview with CNBC earlier Thursday, took a more adversarial stance. “Obviously, as we entered the year, we knew this was going to be a challenging battle and we prepared ourselves for it, and we’re ready to go as long as they want to,” he said.

On the company’s earnings call, Johnston didn’t provide much additional insight into when there might be a deal reached on a YouTube TV renewal. “Obviously, I’m not going to comment much on ongoing negotiations that are live right now. The only thing I would say is, in terms of our guidance, we built a hedge into that with the expectation that that these discussions could go for a little while,” he told analysts.

Johnston added that in terms of “the dollar impact” on Disney’s bottom line, he said: “Keep in mind, there’s two pieces to it. There’s the piece that we’re not getting paid for [from YouTube], and then the piece that we’re picking up by virtue of subscribers moving elsewhere. But beyond that, I don’t want to comment because it is a live negotiation right now.” This week Disney extended Johnston’s employment agreement through 2029.

Such carriage fights are not uncommon in the pay-TV business. But Google and Disney have gone into this dispute deeply entrenched in their positions, and still don’t seem to be very close to a resolution. Disney’s networks went dark on YouTube TV service just before midnight ET on Thursday, Oct. 30, after Disney and Google were far apart on a deal before the expiration of the previous contract.

As is almost always the case, the companies are fighting over price. Google says Disney is asking for an unprecedented fee hike in order to “reset” the market and be able to charge other distributors the same high rates. Disney has countered that Google is “refusing to pay fair rates for our channels.”

The economic pain is likely setting in for both sides. Disney is losing an estimated $30 million per week in revenue because of the YouTube TV blackout, Morgan Stanley has estimated, and the loss of viewers on the platform appears to be cutting into Disney’s TV ratings. Meanwhile, Google is clearly facing a rising tide of irate YouTube TV subscribers, which will only grow the longer the standoff continues.

YouTube TV customers have already missed two straight weeks of “Monday Night Football” on ESPN and ABC (Philadelphia Eagles vs. Green Bay Packers on Nov. 10 and Arizona Cardinals at Dallas Cowboys on Nov. 3), not to mention two Saturdays of college football and other sports, plus ABC primetime shows and more.

This past Sunday, YouTube TV began alerting subscribers about how to manually apply a one-time $20 credit to their account because of the Disney carriage dispute, a move to try to mitigate cancellations.

November 13, 2025 0 comments
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Disney CFO On YouTube TV Fight
TV & Streaming

Disney CFO On YouTube TV Fight

by jummy84 November 13, 2025
written by jummy84

“We’re in the middle of negotiations right now. Things are live. They’re happening. Obviously, as we entered the year, we knew this was going to be a challenging battle and we prepared ourselves for it, and we’re ready to go as long as they want to,” said Disney chief financial officer Hugh Johnston on CNBC this morning on the Mouse’s ongoing fight with YouTube TV.

Disney and YouTube have been locked in a carriage standoff for the past two weeks with ABC, ESPN and other networks going dark Oct. 30 on the Google service that is now the No. 3 U.S. pay-TV provider with 10 million subscribers. Industry and subscriber hopes that a second week of Monday Night Football would hasten the end of the clash went by the boards. Thus far, two revenue-rich Saturday slates of college football and two Monday night contests have been wiped out, with a 21% hit to ratings on the November 3 game between the Dallas Cowboys and Arizona Cardinals.

In an interview on the network just after Disney reported mixed quarterly earnings, Johnston pushed back on comments that YouTube’s parent (Google and Alphabet) may have more leverage in negotiations given the relative size YouTube TV to the overall enterprise.

“This is ultimately about your customers, and, right now, YouTube customers are suffering without this critical content for them, right? Sports in the middle of football season is about as important as you can get. So, I think from that perspective, we perhaps have some leverage as well, because there are other places people can go to get that sports,” Johnston said.

He declined to address particular issues at stake in the talks. “I’m just not going to comment on the various elements of the negotiation. It’s a negotiation. There’s back and forth. They want certain things, you want certain things.”

Johnston will be flanking Disney CEO Bob Iger on a call with Wall Street analysts starting 8:30 ET where the YouTube TV fight will likely come up again.

November 13, 2025 0 comments
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Chris Ripley
TV & Streaming

Sinclair CEO Rips Disney Over ABC Blackout for YouTube TV Users

by jummy84 November 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Chris Ripley, the CEO of Sinclair Broadcast Group, is tired of blackouts — specifically, the one currently keeping ABC programming from about 10 million YouTube TV subscribers. It is such a problem for him that, on a Wednesday conference call tied to his company’s summer 2025 earnings quarter, Ripley didn’t even talk about the Jimmy Kimmel Live! suspension he helped shepherd in September.

“We, as local broadcasters, have no say in whether our content and the content we pay to air will be distributed to local viewers,” Ripley said. “This was clearly not the intent of the Communications Act, and seems to be, from our perspective, an antitrust issue as well.”

Considering the Communications Act was written in 1934 to regulate interstate and foreign wire and radio communications, no, this clearly was not its intent. The act formed the FCC, the government agency that regulates broadcast TV networks, like Disney’s ABC.

These regular disputes over carriage fees (YouTube TV just got out of one with NBCUniversal) and sometimes the subsequent channel(s) blackouts “continue to hurt local viewers and … the ecosystem of local journalism,” Ripley continued.

Ripley believes his local ABC affiliates should still have their content, primarily news and sports, carried through to YouTube TV subscribers, regardless of Disney’s position. Or at least, maybe ask first? To that end, Ripley says he has spoken with both the SEC and antitrust regulators, and the FCC has “opened an investigation into hurtful network affiliation practices.”

“Disney/ABC and other networks should not be able to dictate to us whether we can or cannot distribute content to YouTube TV or even Hulu and Fubo, which, coincidentally are now also owned by Disney,” Ripley said. “Particularly concerning is that consumers are now being forced to buy more streaming services from one of the parties in the dispute to get the content that they literally already paid for.”

November 6, 2025 0 comments
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Google Spurns Disney Request to YouTube TV Restore ABC on Election Night
TV & Streaming

Google Spurns Disney Request to YouTube TV Restore ABC on Election Night

by jummy84 November 4, 2025
written by jummy84

The war of words between Disney and Google continues — on the fourth day of the blackout of ESPN, ABC and other Disney networks on YouTube TV amid a fee dispute.

On Monday, Disney asked Google to offer ABC to YouTube TV customers on Tuesday, Nov. 3, to bring them Election Night coverage.

Google said no — and suggested instead that Disney allow YouTube TV to bring ABC and ESPN back on the air as the two sides hash out a new agreement, because those are ‘the channels that people want.”

“We agree that the right priority here is to give customers what they want. As you know from the many content disputes you’ve been part of, customers don’t want companies fighting and content blackouts. But unfortunately, your proposal would permit us to return Disney’s ABC stations only for a day and will cause customer confusion among those who may briefly see ABC on YouTube TV only to lose it again shortly after,” Google said in its response.

Google noted that “There are plenty of other options for customers – election news information is very widely available across other broadcast stations and news networks on YouTube TV, as well as on the main YouTube service, for free. In fact, on the last two U.S. election days, the vast majority of tuned in YouTube TV subscribers chose not to watch ABC.”

The statement continued, “Publicly resorting to the same tactic that Disney relied on in past disputes fails to acknowledge the distinction between YouTube and other distribution platforms. As you know, Disney can continue to livestream news information on the ABC News YouTube page, which has 19.1 million subscribers, and its ABC local stations can also do so on their YouTube pages.

“To truly achieve what is best for our mutual customers, we propose immediately restoring the Disney channels that our customers watch: ABC and the ESPN networks, while we continue to negotiate. Those are the channels that people want,” Google’s statement concluded.

If you agree with our proposal and give us approval, we can get our operational teams together and get these channels live in hours. Let us know how you’d like to proceed.

Disney said it has sent a proposal to Google for a YouTube TV deal renewal and is awaiting a response.

November 4, 2025 0 comments
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YouTube TV Blackout of ABC, ESPN, Disney Networks in Deal Dispute
TV & Streaming

YouTube TV Blackout of ABC, ESPN, Disney Networks in Deal Dispute

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Disney‘s networks including ESPN and ABC are going dark on YouTube TV.

Google says YouTube TV expects to remove Disney’s networks at the stroke of midnight ET, after the two sides remain far apart on a deal renewal to keep ABC, ESPN and more on the internet TV service. The main sticking point is price — Disney is asking for rate hikes that Google isn’t willing to agree to.

YouTube TV says that if Disney’s channels remain unavailable for “an extended period of time,” it will offer subscribers a one-time $20 credit. YouTube TV’s base subscription plan costs $82.99/month. With the blackout, TV users nationwide will lose their local ABC stations, as well as access to ESPN sports programming including NFL, college football, NBA and NHL games.

Beginning at 9 p.m. PT on Oct. 30/12 a.m. ET on Oct. 31, YouTube TV will begin pulling Disney-owned networks off its service, when the companies’ previous agreement expires. In addition to dropping the live networks, YouTube TV also is removing any DVR library recordings users have made from those networks.

Disney began alerting viewers on Oct. 23 about the carriage dispute with YouTube TV, pointing out that its networks could be removed from the pay-TV provider. YouTube TV is the biggest internet-TV service in the U.S., estimated to have more than 10 million subscribers. In second place is Disney, which just closed a deal to merge its Hulu + Live TV business with Fubo; together, those have almost 6 million subs in North America.

“Last week Disney used the threat of a blackout on YouTube TV as a negotiating tactic to force deal terms that would raise prices on our customers,” a YouTube spokesperson said in a statement. “They’re now following through on that threat, suspending their content on YouTube TV. This decision directly harms our subscribers while benefiting their own live TV products, including Hulu + Live TV and Fubo.”

The YouTube rep continued, “We know this is a frustrating and disappointing outcome for our subscribers and we continue to urge Disney to work with us constructively to reach a fair agreement that restores their networks to YouTube TV. If their content remains off YouTube TV for an extended period of time, we’ll offer subscribers a $20 credit.”

According to Disney, YouTube TV wants a better deal than anyone else in the market — including Comcast and Charter, which have more TV customers — and is unwilling to pay market rates for Disney’s networks or agree to terms that Disney has reached with other distributors, including it own Hulu + Live TV and Fubo services. In its negotiations with Google, Disney also has proposed new genre-based tiers and packaging flexibility to give YouTube TV customers more choices.

“Unfortunately, Google’s YouTube TV has chosen to deny their subscribers the content they value most by refusing to pay fair rates for our channels, including ESPN and ABC,” a Disney spokesperson said. “Without a new agreement in place, their subscribers will not have access to our programming, which includes the best lineup in live sports — anchored by the NFL, NBA, and college football, with 13 of the top 25 college teams playing this weekend.”

The Disney rep continued: “With a $3 trillion market cap, Google is using its market dominance to eliminate competition and undercut the industry-standard terms we’ve successfully negotiated with every other distributor. We know how frustrating this is for YouTube TV subscribers and remain committed to working toward a resolution as quickly as possible.”

Here’s the full list of networks being pulled from YouTube TV: ABC, ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, ESPNews, Freeform, FX, FXX, FXM, Disney Channel, Disney Junior, Disney XD, SEC Network, Nat Geo, Nat Geo Wild, ABC News Live, ACC Network, Localish; on the Spanish plan, ESPN Deportes, Baby TV Español and Nat Geo Mundo.

Disney is the latest media conglomerate to lock horns with Google over YouTube TV this year. Others that have fought with the company include Paramount Global (now Paramount Skydance), Fox Corp. and NBCUniversal — each of which reached a new deal without a blackout. However, YouTube TV dropped Univision and other TelevisaUnivision-owned networks at the end of September after the two sides could not reach a new agreement.

In 2023, Disney and Charter had a public battle over a renewal, before the two sides resolved their differences to avoid a blackout. In 2024, ESPN and other Disney nets went dark on DirecTV for nearly two weeks before they reached a new deal. Earlier this month, Disney inked a carriage renewal pact with Comcast without any drama.

In December 2021, Disney and Google reached a carriage renewal after a two-day blackout. YouTube TV first launched in April 2017.

In another wrinkle to the current Disney/Google standoff, Justin Connolly, Disney’s former head of distribution, joined YouTube as VP of global head of media this spring. Disney sued YouTube and Connolly, alleging breach of contract and seeking to block his employment at Google, in part citing Connolly’s knowledge of Disney as it pertained to contract renewal talks for YouTube TV. After Disney lost a legal ruling in the case, they recently reached a settlement on the matter.

Pictured top: ABC’s “High Potential” starring Kaitlin Olson and Daniel Sunjata

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Shelby Oaks Director Chris Stuckmann on Its Ending, YouTube Origins
TV & Streaming

Shelby Oaks Director Chris Stuckmann on Its Ending, YouTube Origins

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

SPOILER ALERT: This article contains spoilers for the ending of “Shelby Oaks,” now playing in theaters.

So, who took Riley Brennan?

Director Chris Stuckmann makes his directorial debut with Neon’s horror “Shelby Oaks,” which follows the disappearance of a YouTuber and amateur ghost hunter Riley Brennan (Sarah Durn). Having started his career as a film critic and essayist on YouTube, Stuckmann makes the transition to director with a horror movie that expertly blends media and feels at times like a mockumentary ripped right from the video platform.

Camille Sullivan stars as Mia Brennan, who has been searching for her younger sister Riley after she vanished 12 years ago in the remote town of Shelby Oaks with her YouTube group, the Paranormal Paranoids. The film starts out like a fictional documentary on Riley’s disappearance, but then transforms into a supernatural horror that uses found footage and scripted scares unlike any recent studio movie. It’s like “Blair Witch Project” for the YouTube generation, and Stuckmann uses his years of experience on the platform to maximum effect.

With Variety, the director discusses his YouTube origins, shooting on old-school camcorders and that shocking ending.

Courtesy Everett Collection

Why was “Shelby Oaks” the story you wanted to tell with your directorial debut?

I didn’t want to give any producers that I met a chance to turn me down, so I wrote probably like six or seven spec scripts and I went to film festivals and met so many different filmmakers and spent a lot of time trying to meet people and network and get to a place where I could make a connection with someone. It finally helped me get a movie off the ground, because I had been trying for so long. I didn’t want to go into these situations with one script and pitch. So I went into a lot of these film festivals hoping to meet producers with a lot of scripts and pitches. When I bumped into Aaron Koontz at Fantastic Fest in 2019, I had two or three different things I could have pitched him at the time, and “Shelby Oaks” was the one that caught his attention. From there, it became a process of developing it.

I’m from the Midwest, but I’d never heard of Darke County in Ohio before. How did you choose that as your setting?

I was trying to think of a general area in Ohio to set it in. Obviously Shelby Oaks is fictional, but as soon as I discovered the name “Darke” and it has an E, which makes it feel more artsy and it’s farm country, it’s literally exactly what I want. I’ve taken a bit of a “Castle Rock” approach because a lot of my spec scripts take place in Darke County, this little mini cinematic universe that may or may not happen one day.

How did you blend the mix of mockumentary footage, YouTube found footage and scripted horror?

Being on YouTube since 2009, there is a phenomena that I have witnessed over the years: People like to watch people watch things. Reacting videos are a very, very popular trend. There is something very inviting about the idea of seeing a person take in information. There’s this sequence with Mia where she watches the tape, and you’re kind of there with her feeling her emotions. She’s your conduit for these emotions. I really love the idea of mixing media, because I feel like that’s how we all live now. We all pop on TikTok, YouTube, TV, movies, audio books, physical books, there’s no set thing for all of us. We all experience media in different ways.

Was there ever a version of this that was a full mockumentary version?

It started out completely mockumentary. The very first pitch that we ever had was that, out of necessity. My first idea for this movie was that I would self-finance it for like $20,000 and put it on YouTube, because I was tired of waiting. Eventually the ideas kept evolving and kept coming. As I was writing, I couldn’t stop it. It was this whole thing, and now I had to figure out where this goes. The way it came to me was that every time you watch a mockumentary that’s fictional, you know it’s fictional. You’re in on the joke. I understand that most of them are made out of a budgetary necessity, but since we’re all in on the joke, why can’t we have some fun with this? We have cameras that the actors are aware of, why can’t we also have cameras they’re not aware of and just play in that world?

Some of the found-footage jump scares feel like throwbacks to the early days of scary YouTube videos, like the “Relaxing Car Drive” video that I’m sure many people have stumbled upon. How did you make these retro, proto-internet scares?

I do think it does have something to do with YouTube, the internet and the creepypasta generation. We all look for ways to describe how art makes us feel through past pieces of art. We always try to find a way to connect. But we’re in this generational shift now where filmmakers are starting to come out of the early YouTube years. Not all the inspiration is coming from film or TV anymore. A lot of it is coming from the internet. Like you mentioned that relaxing car video, I remember watching that back in the day and the thing pops up at the end and I’m falling back in my seat. We weren’t used to being scared by the internet yet. The internet was still kind of a remotely safe place. There wasn’t social media yet. When things on the internet started to scare us, it’s a whole new world of potential horror that can be mined. The mixed media element was very important to me to present different types of scares. The found-footage scare is very different from the traditional narrative scare, not just in visual presentation, but in sound. In the traditional narrative portion of the film, we really opened up the sound channels and explored so many more possibilities of what we could do with sound. In the the earlier portions of the movie, we tried to restrict ourselves a little bit more to the types of sounds that would come from an old-school camcorder. In those Paranormal Paranoids episodes, I shot all those myself with gear from pre-2008. The camcorder was from 2006. The microphone we used was from 2007. We didn’t allow ourselves to have things they wouldn’t have had.

Did you always imagine the ending as a bleak punch to the gut? How much of it did you want to leave open to interpretation for fans?

Yes, there was never any question for me. All of my favorite horror films tend to have an ending that sticks with you. Obviously, when you’re trying to get your script seen, there are going to be people who make requests, especially some of the less risk-taking producers. I was always very adamant that this has got to be the way it is. When I think about all my favorite horrors, they’re very rarely warm and fuzzy at the end.

If you want to look at just the emotion of it, when something happens to you when you’re younger that leaves a scar or some kind of trauma that it sticks with you, you could view that literally as a crack in a window. If you don’t fix it or get and try to better your life, you just let it sit there and fester and grow and spider-web into something worse, eventually it will probably eat you alive. That’s been the emotional idea behind this thing that has always been looming in the background of Riley and Mia’s life that is also literally represented by this window in the conclusion of the movie. It’s all in there, and there’s a lot of hidden stuff too in various shots.

There are so many filmmakers, like Danny and Michael Philippou and Curry Barker, who are getting Hollywood deals after starting out on YouTube. How does it feel to see them grow after starting out online?

I think it’s absolutely wonderful. I’ve talked with Danny and Mike, and I had Danny and Curry on my podcast. When I started my YouTube channel in 2009, it took about six years before I even was able to get press tickets to movies at advanced screenings. That’s because at that time, YouTube as a platform was not taken seriously by Hollywood. If you said you were a YouTube film critic, they’d be like, ‘Cool. Have a nice day.’ Now, when you go to a premiere, what do you see everywhere? YouTubers and TikTokers. Hollywood has had to take the platforms seriously. I think it’s the same with film. There is a new generation of people in their 30s or late 20s who are coming up and started on Vine, TikTok and YouTube. Now they’re getting a chance to make movies, because that is the progression of time that we’re in. If YouTube existed in the ’70s or ’80s, I guarantee Scorsese, Spielberg, Robert Rodriguez, all those guys, would have been uploading.

October 25, 2025 0 comments
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How Fremantle Is Reaching Out to the YouTube Generation
TV & Streaming

How Fremantle Is Reaching Out to the YouTube Generation

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

As he prepares to travel to Mipcom, Andrew Llinares, Fremantle’s director of global entertainment, talks to Variety about his market slate and the enduring appeal of the production and distribution powerhouse’s legacy shows, such as “Got Talent,” “Idol” and “The X Factor.”

Leading Fremantle’s entertainment slate at Mipcom are strategic reality show “Pandora’s Box,” comedy format “Knockout Champs” and factual entertainment series “The Secret DNA of Us.”

“Pandora’s Box” was developed by RTL Creative Unit in the Netherlands, with productions already underway in the Netherlands, France and Hungary. The Dutch show is produced by Fremantle’s Blue Circle for RTL Netherlands.

“It feels like an evolution of that strategic reality genre with a new game mechanic at the core of it,” Llinares says.

Strategic reality format “Pandora’s Box” will launch at Mipcom.

Courtesy of Fremantle

The show is inspired by the Greek myth – where Pandora, the first mortal woman on Earth, was given a sealed box by the gods. “We have Pandora’s Box at the center of a game with 12 contestants, who are told, ‘Do not open the box.’ If the box remains closed, there’s a big prize fund. However, there are lots of temptations to open the box,” he explains.

He adds, “Two of the players are cursed in each episode; they discover that they’ve been cursed, and that means their busts have been lowered into the box. Whichever two players are in the box at the end of the episode are going to fight in a duel to stay in the competition. So, you don’t want to be in the box.”

The show has the “look of the world of Greek mythology,” Llinares says.

“Knockout Champs,” which comes from Dutch digital label De Stroom and is produced with Blue Circle, features a mix of content creators from the digital world and comedians. The show, which was originally created for YouTube and established a substantial following there, has now been produced for Dutch streamer NPO Start.

Andrew Llinares, Fremantle’s director of global entertainment.

Courtesy of Fremantle

“It’s a comedy show in rounds where two teams are trying to make the other team laugh against their will. You score points by making your opponents laugh,” Llinares says.

“Knockout Champs” was created with Supergaande, a group of genuine friends comparable to groups like Sidemen and Beta Squad. It’s boundary-pushing comedy that speaks to a young, diverse generation by staying true to the culture and comedy their in-built fan bases live for.

“We all know YouTube is getting lots of young eyeballs right now, and it can be a struggle to get young eyeballs to traditional television. But what happened was that the young audience absolutely came over to watch the show. They fell in love with the content that they were watching on YouTube, and they followed it to NPO Start,” Llinares says.

“The show was made very much in the same style as the YouTube content. Sometimes when something makes that transition and is made for ‘real TV’ it would potentially be made in a different style, and maybe cleaned up and polished, and jokes that are edgy might be edited out because they’re too edgy.

“There was a very real desire to keep the show exactly the same, so it has the same spirit, the same kind of language, the same edginess to it. What that meant was that the young audience that watched the show felt they were watching something incredibly authentic.

“It’s really fun, and there’s an edge to it, which is the core to its success. It hasn’t allowed itself to be sanitized for regular TV.”

The show’s success with younger audiences has vindicated the approach. “We shouldn’t give up on young people just because it’s harder to reach them. Young people consume content probably more than anybody else on the planet, and I still want our formats to speak to young people. I want young people to be excited by our formats,” Llinares says.

Music artist, YouTuber and boxer KSI has become a judge on “Britain’s Got Talent.”

Courtesy of Fremantle

“Knockout Champs” held the top spot for four weeks on NPO Start. In the same timeframe, on social media it exploded with 50 million plus views in just four weeks. It ranks as NPO Start’s third most-watched title so far this year. The show’s core audience is young men (78% of the audience are 16 to 34 year old men).

Fremantle happily embraces both traditional television and the digital world, Llinares says. “My take is that the world of entertainment is just getting broader, and there is a space for all of it, to interact with it, with all the different pieces of it. It’s a little like how KSI coming in as a judge on ‘Britain’s Got Talent’ speaks to that kind of melding of those worlds. I don’t think they’re separate anymore. I think that it’s all mainstream, and there’s a way of bringing it together.”

“The Secret DNA of Us” is a “warm hug of a show,” Llinares says. It was created by Fremantle label Naked in the U.K., and the first version of it was produced by Eureka in Australia for SBS. “Each episode, we take an entire town and test their DNA, and from that we find out what the common connections between people in the town are. We also find some really interesting individual stories from that DNA. So you get this amazing sense of community, this amazing sense of people in a community finding out that they’re linked in all sorts of ways. They might share a similar story. They might even be related. And then you’ll get those people that we really highlight in the show, who find out remarkable things about themselves.

“The Secret DNA of Us” is like “a warm hug,” Andrew Llinares says.

Courtesy of SBS

“So it’s a warm hug is a good way of describing it, because it’s one of those shows that speaks to all of us, wanting to know who we are and where we’re from. It can be a really joyful show, it can be a funny show, but it can be a very emotional show as well.”

For a show to be a success, it needs to feel culturally relevant, Llinares observes. “For something to take off and go beyond being a TV show, that becomes something that people talk about in society, it absolutely does have to touch the moment, and speak to the culture of the moment.”

Reviewing his three headliners at Mipcom, Llinares says, “I think they all speak to very different needs of the market, and they also speak to different audiences. They all tick very different boxes.”

Some of Fremantle’s evergreen formats have either celebrated or are about to reach major milestones. In the summer, “America’s Got Talent” started its 20th series, and next year Fremantle celebrates 70 years of “The Price Is Right,” 50 years of “Family Feud” and 25 years of “Idol.”

Llinares is well-qualified to comment on the success of such globe-trotting formats. He was the original showrunner on “The X Factor” and “Got Talent” when they first launched in the U.K. in 2004 and 2007, respectively. Since 2011, while living and working in the U.S., he was an EP and showrunner for the U.S. version of “The X Factor,” before becoming EP and showrunner on “Dancing With the Stars” in 2018.

What’s the secret to their continued success? “With great shows and keeping them on air for many years that core DNA of the show is so, so important,” Llinares says.

“What’s wonderful about ‘Got Talent’ is that it’s been around for 20 years now, and it’s continued to grow in terms of the types of talents on the show and the scale of the show, but the DNA of the show has remained the same, which is taking people and celebrating their extraordinary talents and the amazing stories that go along with that.

“It’s an amazing fairytale of a show. When you boil it down, it’s about taking people and absolutely celebrating the best version of them and I think that central core DNA of the show has never, ever changed.”

The introduction of the Golden Buzzer is one innovation, but it simply enhanced the emotional punch of the show.

“I always think a show like ‘Got Talent’ is an emotional journey. You see that in those audition shows. You have the emotion of someone coming in and wanting to make it through, wanting to be celebrated. And if they get a ‘Yes,’ you get this huge, amazing moment, as we did with someone like Susan Boyle back in the day. The Golden Buzzer just takes that moment and makes it even bigger and makes it more of a spectacle.”

He adds, “I always say we’re in the business of feelings, and so you have to make sure the show makes you feel something. And I think the talent shows in particular make people feel in a very extreme way, like you feel extreme joy or extreme sorrow, depending on whether someone’s doing well or if they have a bad week, and they’re eliminated. As producers, you have to continue to then think, ‘How do I find a new way of creating that emotion?’

“So, really, when it boils down, what’s the success of a great format? It’s the audience being engaged.”

Nowadays, engagement also means social media interaction. “When we’re talking about longevity, we know one of the things that keeps the conversation going around the shows is social video,” Llinares says. “The auditions are wonderful bite-sized stories. They’re perfect for that kind of viewing, they are doing extraordinary numbers.”

“We got a first-window into it with Susan Boyle, and even Paul Potts on the first British series, when YouTube was in its absolute infancy. It had grown in a couple of years between the two of them to the point where it felt like there was a huge global story around Susan Boyle.

“We’re marking an incredible 20 seasons of ‘America’s Got Talent’ – a series that just reached 1.7 billion social video views.

“Fremantle has a long-standing legacy in creating enduring entertainment hits – across decades and platforms – and part of that success comes from constantly evolving with audiences.

“You can see a bridging of the worlds of linear and digital entertainment, whether it’s the breakout success of ‘Knockout Champs’ co-created with digital-first talent; making YouTuber KSI a permanent judge on the next season of ‘Britain’s Got Talent,’ or opening up our IP to make exciting creator-led titles like ‘Sidemen Supermarket Sweep.’”

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Why My Oscar Follow-Up Is Premiering on YouTube
TV & Streaming

Why My Oscar Follow-Up Is Premiering on YouTube

by jummy84 October 9, 2025
written by jummy84


Why My Oscar Follow-Up Is Premiering on YouTube



























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After an Oscar nomination for her short “Chau, Beyond the Lines,” filmmaker Courtney Marsh set about making her feature debut. But getting it in front of an audience? That required some outside the box thinking.

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