YouTube bans staged animal rescue videos
Hi and welcome to Insider Advertising for March 29. I'm senior advertising reporter Lauren Johnson, and here's what's going on:
- YouTube bans staged animal rescue videos.
- Vice Media layoffs.
- NBCU mulls a subscription-based video service.
If this email was forwarded to you, sign up here for your daily insider's guide to advertising and media.
Tips, comments, suggestions? Drop me a line at LJohnson@insider.com or on Twitter at @LaurenJohnson.
YouTube plans to ban videos showing staged animal rescues. The policy shift comes after the platform was found running ads from major brands on videos depicting animal cruelty.
- YouTube has been running ads from major brands on videos depicting animal cruelty, Lara O'Reilly reports.
- YouTube says it removed videos or stopped running ads on some of these videos.
- It also plans to ban staged animal rescue videos from the platform.
Read the story.
Vice Media just laid off a handful of digital staffers
- Vice Media laid off a handful of top digital staffers on Thursday, Steven Perlberg reports.
- A spokesperson attributed the layoffs to a recent shift in the digital leadership team's makeup.
- The layoffs did not include anyone in editorial, a source said.
Read the story.
NBCUniversal has discussed a new subscription video-streaming service separate from Peacock
- NBCUniversal has discussed a subscription streaming service under the name "Universal Stream," Claire Atkinson reports.
- NBCU has its Peacock streaming service, but the brand isn't well known around the world.
- Such a new service could cost billions to launch, though.
Read the story.
More stories we're reading:
- Loud commercials are infuriating Americans, and streaming TV is making them even worse (Insider)
- We identified the 194 most powerful people at Google under CEO Sundar Pichai. Explore our exclusive org chart. (Insider)
- Volv bills itself as 'TikTok for news.' The Snap-backed app makes news stories you can read in 9 seconds. (Insider)
- 98% of the New Yorker Union voted in favor of authorizing a strike against Condé Nast (Insider)
- Media startup Axios is reportedly in merger talks with sports-media outlet The Athletic, and the combined company could go public (Insider)
- Ad agencies step away from oil and gas in echo of cigarette exodus (The New York Times)
- ABC seeks $2 million for Oscar ads, despite worries of audience decline (Variety)
Thanks for reading and see you tomorrow! You can reach me in the meantime at LJohnson@insider.com and subscribe to this daily email here.