Thursday, July 6, 2017

Casey Neistat Gives a Sneak Peek at CNN’s Beme Startup

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Casey Neistat CNN Beme upate

Casey Neistat, the filmmaker and YouTube vlogger who sold his company (with partner Matt Hackett) behind the streaming video app Beme to CNN last November for a reported $25 million, gave a sneak peek on Wednesday at how he is relaunching Beme as a media brand for CNN.

For the New York-based Neistat, whose popular YouTube channel (with its 7 million subscribers) was not part of the CNN deal, Beme’s biggest challenge will be maintaining an irreverent, iconoclastic style in the bosom of a mainstream media behemoth.

It helps that Beme is staying away from the suits at CNN uptown with its office and studio way downtown, Neistat explained on the video. He’s also been using the influx of CNN cash to go on a hiring spree, with his expanding team busy developing programming and the visual identity for the new Beme media brand.

casey-neistat-cnn-beme-update-070517

The reborn Beme will target young viewers with shortform programming designed for the platforms where they hang out: YouTube, Snapchat, etc. The goal is to create a free-wheeling brand of journalism that gets away from the traditional stand-up and storytelling that CNN is known for. It will aim to be more unvarnished, raw and real—a daring choice at a time when the CNN brand is under fire in certain quarters. Just don’t call it VICE revisited, as Neistat notes in the comments:

“heya – don’t judge too quickly, this is just a little sample. we are approaching a lot of topics from serious ones like extremism to more curious ones like the recent legalization of weed in Las Vegas,” wrote Neistat in the comment section [sic]. “topics will vary greatly but will always fall back to what we find interesting. also, most everything i say in this video i talk about in greater depth on my friend Phil’s Podcast, if you haven’t checkd that out yet you should”

“We’re going to be making a tremendous amount of media,” Neistat told Philip DeFranco (above) in an episode of the latter’s podcast. “We’re going to start with a daily show and a weekly investigative reporting show, and then we want to get into sports and all kinds of societal issues and music and fashion and art, and on the tech side we’re building technology that enables that media. What we’re doing is so much more broad than news.”

In a brief history Neistat said Beme was a “good app, but Snapchat was better and then Instagram was better – so why in the summer of 2016 did CNN buy a failed company? The value behind the app – and they liked me too.” In essence, CNN acquired the Beme team and Neistat’s social media savvy and ideas. He expects to launch the Beme YouTube channel within “weeks.”

Beme history / Casey Neistat

At a time when CNN has become a political hot potato, Neistat says Beme will not be politically motivated – politics will play a tiny piece as they’re already “fighting against CNN baggage.”

Plans include “starting on YouTube, Beme news four days a week at first hosted by me and regular journalists and our head of production Jake (Roper). It will be about things that interest us. We’re making it now. We’ll see what sucks, correct it and make it very good – good enough at launch – then very good and then make it great together.”

After a quick look at branding elements like fonts and logo applications for the new Beme, he screens a pilot segment and explains it will be more of an experience than just news reporting.

Casey Neistat Beme logo

Beme news logo in development Casey Neistat

The sample Beme story highlights the business of buying and creating fake social media likes. It notes click farms and a raid in Thailand where hundreds of cell phones are rotated amongst hundreds of thousands of sim cards to make it look like users are actually using a product.

Cut to a vending machine in Russia where people can buy Instagram likes like candy. Then a Beme producer buys 5,000 likes for a staffer for $39.99 and shows the results as he sees likes on an Instagram post skyrocket past 3,000. OK, so it’s a little rough, and its guerrilla style does recall (or at least feel in step with) VICE, Vox, BuzzFeed and other millennial-skewing media brands.

As for future plans, Neistat promises “an investigative reporting show weekly where we’ll dig deep into one issue. After that sports, music/fashion focused – more cultural – that’s the scope of the ambition on the media side.

“Don’t be skeptical. Just check it out at launch. If you think it’s shit call us out and tell us why it’s shit. If you think it’s really shit, then never watch it again. But if you like it – let us know.”

Casey Neistat

Not the least bit shy of controversy, Neistat was featured in his own video (“The First Day of Summer”) and a companion video (“How to Pick Up Girls With Casey Neistat”, with fellow vlogger Jesse Wellens) while in France for the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity. It was sponsored by Samsung (a regular sponsor) as they lived out a teenage fantasy which caused a social media backlash (and concern for what his wife Candice might think).

Unfazed, Neistat explained in a follow-up video that it was all fake, as explained in the video’s premise, and that Candice was OK with it.

He also showed more of the unseen footage to give context for the video, in typical bare-your-soul Neistat fashion.

Time will soon tell if Neistat can spin a Beme news brand into experiential magic for CNN with a side of news to go.

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