Here’s what’s shaping the industry right now.
Tubi & TikTok launch the ‘Creatorverse Incubator’.

Fox-owned Tubi and TikTok have launched a formal pipeline for short-form creators to develop original series exclusively for Tubi. TikTok finds the talent, Tubi develops the shows, and TikTok’s Spotlight tool then drives its 150 million US users toward them. In plain English: it’s a distribution strategy dressed up as a content deal.
Peacock declares itself an entertainment platform, not a streaming service.

Peacock has overhauled its mobile app to look far more like TikTok than a streaming service, complete with an AI avatar of Andy Cohen narrating personalised clips and live NBA games shot in vertical format. NBCUniversal’s chairman was blunt: don’t think of it as a streaming platform, think of it as an entertainment platform.
The FIFA World Cup is coming to YouTube.

For the first time in the tournament’s history, media partners can live stream the first 10 minutes of every 2026 World Cup match on YouTube, with highlights and select full games to follow.
FIFA is also unlocking its full digital archive. After years behind paywalls, the world’s biggest sporting event is going open platform, but will free-to-watch viewers transition behind the payment gateway after the first 10 minutes? Only time will tell…
Mr.Beast’s new platform, Vyro, changes clipping forever.

MrBeast has launched Vyro, a platform where editors earn per 1,000 views clipping long-form creator content into short-form video — no audience required. It’s crowdsourced distribution, and with a $300,000 reward pool already live, it’s very much open for business
Meta Is Paying Creators to Come Back to Facebook

Meta has launched Creator Fast Track, offering guaranteed monthly payments to lure established creators away from TikTok and YouTube. Creators with over a million followers earn $3,000 a month for three months. Facebook has 3 billion users, but has been losing the creator war for years. This is the ransom offer.