The roadmap for the rest of 2026 is aggressive.
Project Chimera: An interactive lifestyle series where viewers vote on the itinerary of a celebrity traveler in real time. Does he go to the underground rave or the silent meditation retreat? Does he order the $5,000 whiskey or the dive bar shot? The audience decides, and the consequences are broadcast live.
Big Video Realty: A vertical integration play where we don't just film mansions—we host open bidding wars inside the video player. Watch the tour, place a bid, close the deal. Lifestyle content as e-commerce as entertainment.
The Obituary Series: A respectful but unflinching look at the fall of 2010s influencers. Where are they now? What happened to the money? The marriages? The brands? Part documentary, part cautionary tale, part reunion special. Hot Big Tits Video
We are also launching "Big Video Sleep," a 24/7 ambient channel featuring the world’s most expensive hotel lobbies. No talking. Just the sound of marble floors, distant jazz, and the clink of ice in heavy crystal glasses. It is absurd. It is beautiful. It is very, very Big Video.
Of course, there is backlash. There is always backlash. Traditional lifestyle magazines have decried Big Video as "the opioid of the attention economy." A recent op-ed in a legacy newspaper called our content "a firehose of status signaling and emotional poverty."
We framed that quote. It hangs in our breakroom. The roadmap for the rest of 2026 is aggressive
Because here is the truth that the elites refuse to accept: Joy is not quiet. Community is not a silent book club. The Big Video audience is loud, diverse, and voracious. They are nurses who unwind by watching a billionaire fail at making sourdough. They are college students who study for finals with a livestream of a 24-hour Korean spa in the background. They are retirees who live vicariously through a couple sailing a superyacht into a storm.
Our user retention isn't driven by addiction. It is driven by belonging. In a fragmented world, Big Video is the digital campfire. We gather around the glow of the absurd, the lavish, and the real.
Big Video’s greatest trick is psychological mirroring. The algorithm doesn't just suggest what you like; it predicts who you are about to become. Of course, there is backlash
For years, streamers optimized for "second screen" viewing—shows you could half-watch while scrolling Instagram. But Netflix, Amazon, and Apple TV+ have realized that their most valuable asset is "appointment viewing" of blockbuster content.
Look at the data. The most-streamed finales (think Stranger Things or The Last of Us) see a massive spike in connected TV viewership, not mobile devices. Why? Because spectacle demands size.
Big Video content is characterized by "theater-like" production values:
The lifestyle and entertainment industry has pivoted. Studios are no longer making "TV shows"; they are making 10-hour movies. And you cannot properly watch a 10-hour movie on an iPad.