Jim Louderback is a media pioneer: a journalist and columnist who went on to become the CEO of the internet-based television network Revision3, and later of the global events business, VidCon.
Today, as the editor of the popular Inside the Creator Economy newsletter, he is thinking a lot about how creators can respond to AI.
"What are the things that they can uniquely do that AI can't?" he asks. "If you don't lean into the things that make you uniquely human ... I think we then just end up in this one-to-one world, where all media is crafted specifically 100% for us, and we have no fandom, we have no culture, we have no connections."
Today on Revolution.Social, Jim and Rabble talk about the history of blogging, video, social media, and digital celebrities; the "tragedy of the platforms," that creators on TikTok and YouTube don't know enough about their audiences; and the benefits of having some kind of gatekeepers in a creative ecosystem. They also discuss the pivotal role VidCon played in uniting digital influencers, and how Gen Z is making fandom more and more niche.
Chapters:
0:00 Introduction
5:43 The Impact of VidCon and Legitimatizing Creators
11:20 Community vs. Celebrity
14:19 Moving Beyond Platform Dependence
19:21 Parasocial Relationships and Personal Branding
22:19 Democratized vs. Institutional Gatekeepers
27:16 AI's Trust Crisis
34:40 Reclaiming Humanity with diVine
41:59 The Economics of Belonging
48:26 Streaming, Long-Form Content, and Real-Time Validation
56:54 The Failure of Video Replies
59:43 Nostalgia and the Future of Creator Ethics
Learn more about Jim: https://louderback.com/
Inside the Creator Economy: https://insidethecreator.beehiiv.com/
Follow Rabble on Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/rabble.nz
Follow the podcast: https://revolution.social/episodes/
This episode was produced and edited by Eric Johnson from LightningPod.fm, and executive produced by Alice Chan from Flock Marketing.
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