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“Creator TV” is a thing, and Spotter wants to sell it to big brands

As the creator economy becomes a “must buy,” major brands are taking their first steps into the industry. As those sponsors hunt for the creator partners that best suit their needs, they are looking for guidance, and Spotter is leading them through the wilderness.

For the second year in a row, the company that brands itself as a driver of “premium creator entertainment” held a Spotter Showcase in New York City. The theme of the event was clear from the start. By assembling a speaker lineup filled with top creators and knowledgeable executives, Spotter sought to introduce and sell the concept of “Creator TV.”

For many advertisers, the prevailing attitude is that the creator economy is a numbers game. That’s why influencer marketing budgets and the volume of YouTube integrations are increasing year-over-year.

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The Creator TV framing turns that idea on its head. Spotter’s argument is that the biggest creators on platforms like YouTube can cut through the clutter with high-quality, long-form content and tight bonds with fans. Those stars operate like traditional studios and put out programming that rivals the buzziest releases on TV and streaming.

Here’s how Spotter breaks down the data: The top five video platforms generate 200 trillion annual views, but only 242,000 creators (less than 1% of the total community) make long-form content that runs for at least 60 seconds and pulls in at least 100,000 views. When you look at “TV-length” episodic programming — i.e. the traditional 22-minute format — the number of applicable creators shrinks to 7,000

, but that small group earned 148 billion views in the U.S. in 2025.

While billions of videos are uploaded each year, only a fraction truly command attention,” reads a Spotter press release. “Creator TV is that fraction: a concentrated layer of culture built to support meaningful, large-scale brand investment, and focused enough to cut through everything else.”

To explain how those long-form high-achievers do so well, Spotter let the creators speak for themselves. Airrack, Dude Perfect, Jordan Matter, and Kinigra Deon were four of the long-form innovators who were highlighted at the Spotter Showcase. “If we build something we believe in, [fans] will believe in it too because they’ve been along for that journey,” Matter said.

Some brands have already started mining value from that potent mix of attention, influence, and creativity. Adobe, a Spotter partner, has more than doubled its investment in the creator economy over the past two years. If the other brands and agencies that showed up at the Spotter Showcase want to be the next ones to buy in, the presenters told them where to look.

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Published by
Sam Gutelle

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