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Tribeca Film Festival formall invites social media creators to hit the big screen

As social media creators become major players in Hollywood, Tribeca is officially recognizing their work. The company behind the annual Tribeca Film Festival has announced that social stars will be formally invited to present their work in the Tribeca N.O.W. category.

Beginning with the 2026 festival — which will run from June 3 to June 14 — creators will be part of Tribeca N.O.W. (the acronym stands for New Online Work.) With that decision, Tribeca will become the first major U.S. film festival to highlight creator-led productions alongside traditional festival fare.

Creators have until February 5 to submit to Tribeca N.O.W. “Storytelling is evolving—and so is Tribeca,” said Tribeca Enterprises Co-Founder and Co-Chair Jane Rosenthal in a statement. “For 25 years, we’ve been drawn to new forms of creative expression and the artists pushing those boundaries. Today’s creators are among the most inventive storytellers working in any medium. Expanding Tribeca NOW honors how audiences experience stories today—on every screen, in every form. That spirit of reinvention is what Tribeca was built on.”

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Tribeca N.O.W. kicked off in 2014 as an early showcase for artists who were releasing new work online. One of the category’s biggest success stories to date is High Maintenance, a hit web series that moved to HBO with an assist from Tribeca.

The creators behind High Maintenance were TV vets who chose to operate online. That career path has been typical for Tribeca N.O.W. entrants up to this point, but organizers have slowly brought social-native creators into the fold as well. In 2018, for example, YouTube stars like Ari Fitz 

and Matt Steffanina participated in a N.O.W. Creator Market that took place within the Triangle Below Canal.

That market was part of a broader, long-term effort to unite the Tribeca Film Festival with the creator economy. After hosting a Digital Creators Market in 2016, Tribeca teamed up with Whalar Group in 2024 to bring a creator vertical to its eponymous event. The 2025 edition of the festival made even more space for creators, and that trend will continue into 2026.

Tribeca is inviting creators to screen Hollywood-grade work, and those social stars are rising to the challenges. Success stories like the RackaRacka horror flick Talk To Me have turned creators into hot commodities for buzzy distributors like A24 and Neon. Chris Stuckmann fed the creator-to-director pipeline with his 2025 horror film Shelby Oaks, and gamers like Markiplier and Jacksepticeye are poised to continue that trend into 2026 and beyond.

Tribeca is positioning itself as one of the leading voices championing the creator-filmmaker movement. If the Creator N.O.W. update goes well, YouTube might be more than the Oscars host in 2029 — it could find its homegrown talent on the nominee list, too.

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Published by
Sam Gutelle

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