With the US presidential election just 43 days away, online video platforms are looking to mobilize American voters however they can. For Vevo, best known as a distributor of music videos, political action has taken the shape of Why I Vote, a new original series in which popular artists discuss the issues most important to them.
Why I Vote is a collaboration between Vevo, Rock the Vote, and DoSomething.org. As the influence of those organizations suggest, the new web series is highly charged and slanted toward progressive issues — or at least that’s the vibe the first episode gives off. In the premiere, rapper Vic Mensa talks about his upbringing on the South Side of Chicago, his experience with racial profiling, and his response to the police shooting of teenager Laquan McDonald.
While Why I Vote is primarily meant as a timely series that inspires young people to vote and capitalizes on the current political climate, it is also a look into the sort of original programming Vevo could distribute in the coming months. The music video service is planning to launch a subscription video service in the near future, and its original content library will likely a big part of its appeal to consumers. Why I Vote’s focus on celebrity testimonials is a potential draw, as its its tone. Mensa’s sermon on police violence is filled with strong language and is therefore too edgy for most TV networks.
According to Variety, future episodes of Why I Vote will feature musicians like Kesha and T.I., who will talk about LGBT rights and mass incarceration, respectively.
TikTok was one of the first social media companies to add labels to AI-generated content. Those…
Thirteen years ago, Nathan Barry sat down at his desk with one goal: to send…
The global impact of the creator economy has been a hot topic in recent years,…
On YouTube, the three-year-old firm Agentio is a leader in the realm of AI-powered creator advertising. Now, those…
YouTube is renaming one of its content policies and clarifying three kinds of videos will…
Netflix and Jay Shetty have kicked off a distribution strategy that challenges YouTube's identity as the first window…