Morgan Spurlock Doc Follows Lives of Richard Branson, will.i.am on Hulu

Morgan Spurlock, the filmmaker behind the anti-McDonald’s documentary Super Size Me, has a new project, A Day in the Life, set to premiere August 17—on Hulu.

A Day in the Life will feature six half-hour episodes each chronicling a 24 hour period in the life of  jet-setting entrepreneur Richard Branson, the Black Eyed Peas’ will.i.am

, comedian Russell Peters, Girl Talk, and others.

Hulu’s decision to invest in premium long form original programming follows Netflix’s $100 million purchase for rights to Kevin Spacey’s 26 episode, half-hour series House of Cards.

Subscribe for daily Tubefilter Top Stories

Subscribe

With A Day in the Life, Hulu is transitioning from the familiar role as a passive distributor of TV shows from ABC, NBC, and Fox—the networks owned by Hulu’s media company parents—to a business of original programming.

But unlike what Netflix seems to be doing, Hulu is not laying down the gauntlet and competing with TV. Andy Forssell, Hulu’s Senior Vice President of Content Acquisition, told the Associated Press that Hulu’s original shows will have a smaller budget and will be tailored to Hulu’s online audience. “In most cases, it’s going to be something that came from the traditional network or studio partner, but … for whatever reason is not getting made,” he said. “We can be the difference maker and get it done.”

With Hulu up for grabs, however, a premium original content play can only help with a sale—especially with the recent news that Fox shows will be delayed eight days before running on Hulu. According to Ad Age, Hulu keeps the vast majority of the ad revenue from A Day in the Life, rather than passing 70% to 75% back to the network that owns the show.

The series marks a major upgrade in original programming for Hulu, who got its first taste for premium original series with If I Can Dream, a reality competition produced by American Idol creator Simon Fuller. Hulu is following a trend by other online vide0 network sites who are pursuing premium original programming: Funny Or Die is on the lookout for feature-length comedies, and YouTube is out pitching multi-million dollar web series.

Share
Published by
Drew Baldwin

Recent Posts

Fox’s new digital IP division is giving creators cash, ads, and distribution to make their next hit series

There's been a lot of chatter lately about the increasing interweave of the creator industry…

11 hours ago

At VidCon, a pickleball competition will bring more visibility to creator sports tours

Creators have already established themselves as the next generation of professional sports broadcasters. Can they…

1 day ago

Epic Games has now paid over $1 billion to the creators of Fortnite’s “Islands”

Three years after Epic Games launched the Unreal Editor for Fortnite (UEFN), creator payouts associated…

2 days ago

The British Film Institute’s video archive will preserve the weird and wild sides of web culture

The British Film Institute is committing to the preservation of internet history, no matter how…

2 days ago

Uscreen has helped content creators make over $1 billion with membership programs, white-label apps, and more

Here in 2026, the global content creator economy is a $250 billion juggernaut that grows…

2 days ago

Report: Nearly 60% of videos recommended to new TikTok accounts are AI slop

YouTube has taken some steps to reduce the volume of AI slop on its platform,…

2 days ago