 The media word of the year is âclipping.â Chopped-up hours of video content have become the primary food source of a modern media economy that revolves around vertical video feeds â and is increasingly being produced at industrial scale. No one seems to be able to stop talking about the leftist Twitch streamer Hasan Piker â despite the fact that, letâs be honest, most people talking about him have never tuned in to one of his (horizontal) livestreams. TBPN has partially justified its wild sale price by emphasizing how the views on its clips outstrip the modest audience for its livestreams. (Now the showâs fans are suspicious that since OpenAI bought TBPN, X is downranking the clips; when Semafor asked, OpenAIâs Chris Lehane didnât answer.) Creating and distributing video clips online is hardly new. YouTube built a business worth hundreds of billions on video clips. Clipping changed sports media years ago, and transformed the way professional sports leagues thought about how fans were consuming the games. Mediaite, which we wrote about this week for different reasons, has essentially been clipping television content for its website for two decades. But now itâs an industry. Twitch CEO Dan Clancy told me onstage at Semafor World Economy on Thursday that the thing heâs most excited about is a product that will make clipping easier. The podcast platform Riverside has an AI tool that automatically suggests and creates clips of podcast moments; Mixed Signals producer Josh Billinson tells me itâs getting better by the week. Itâs a consequence of AIâs growing strength at identifying news: For our convening last week, reporter J.D. Capelouto built us a new tool that analyzed the transcript of every panel, alerted individual journalists on Slack when terms/phrases/themes theyâd asked to track came up, and showed where in the conversation the moment could be quickly pulled out ⊠and clipped. For all their ubiquity, are any of those clips good or memorable? Not particularly, for the most part. But for the moment, clips seem like the format that the platforms and media companies and creators have agreed is cheap enough and interesting enough to keep peopleâs attention. Also today: We recap a jam-packed week of media news at Semafor World Economy. You can check out our conversations with a parade of top-tier media CEOs in full or in clipped format on YouTube (thanks, Josh!). |