Jemele Hill and her podcast network are leaving Spotify

Rev

Bong
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
21,457
Reputation
3,007
Daps
68,821
Reppin
Uptown


*braces for the comments* :hubie:

Looks like Spotify is cutting costs just like many others…
———————————

Another prominent podcaster is leaving Spotify Technology SA, as the company reverses many of its biggest investments in original audio and loses yet another Black voice.

Jemele Hill, an award-winning journalist and former sportscaster, is ending her relationship with the Swedish streaming service, which exclusively distributes the Jemele Hill Is Unbothered podcast and her Unbothered Network of shows, according to people familiar with the conversations. Hill and Spotify are negotiating the terms of her separation, which will result in the end of her show and network — at least at Spotify, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the negotiation is ongoing. Spotify declined to comment.

Under pressure to rein in costs and deliver profits, Spotify has reconsidered its expensive podcasting strategy. Under the leadership of then-Chief Content Officer Dawn Ostroff, the company spent more than $1 billion to acquire studios and secure exclusive licenses to shows. Ostroff also went on to sign several Black celebrities to exclusive deals, including the Obamas’ production company, Higher Ground, as well as filmmaker Ava DuVernay and rapper Joe Budden.

Jemele Hill Is Unbothered launched exclusively on Spotify in 2019, one of the first deals in the audio streaming platform’s initial push into the industry. That year, it acquired three audio companies — Gimlet Media, Parcast and Anchor — that formed the backbone of its initial programming strategy as it diversified beyond music.

Spotify announced plans to build a podcast network for Black women around Hill in 2021, the year after protests against racism swept the US. But it took more than a year for Spotify to announce additional shows, and the network launched only two other titles.

More than four years after Spotify’s first flurry of deals, the leaders of Gimlet, Parcast and Anchor have left — as have all those Black stars and Ostroff herself. Budden attributed his exit to pay disputes, according to a podcast episode he published. Higher Ground, meanwhile, didn’t renew its deal last year because the exclusive nature of the arrangement hamstrung the reach of its shows. The team also struggled to get new programs greenlit.

DuVernay left her agreement during an uproar last year over Joe Rogan, Spotify’s biggest exclusive podcaster, after he shared alleged Covid misinformation and a clip surfaced online of him using the N-word.

During that Rogan dust-up, Hill issued a statement saying she’d like to see Spotify pay $100 million to a Black person, which was the reported size of Rogan’s deal at the time. The New York Times later reported that it cost Spotify more than $200 million.

Spotify did eventually announce a Creator Equity Fund with the goal of dispensing $100 million to creators from historically marginalized groups.
However, Bloomberg reported in March that the company spent less than 10% of the money as it rounded out its first year of existence.

Another fund at Spotify experienced similar dysfunction. In February, unionized employees at Parcast sent a letter to management saying the company had approved just $5,000 for diversity, equity, inclusion and accessibility work, out of a promised $100,000.

Hill started her career as a newspaper reporter before joining ESPN and becoming an on-air talent. She left ESPN in 2018 and began contributing to the Atlantic magazine.
 
Last edited:

VegetasHairline

Veteran
Joined
Jun 25, 2012
Messages
34,816
Reputation
11,470
Daps
142,482
Reppin
CACS
And nothing of value was lost!
weebey-thewire.gif
 

Michael's Black Son

Blanket Jackson
Supporter
Joined
Sep 30, 2013
Messages
52,068
Reputation
15,134
Daps
229,283
Reppin
New York City & Neverland Ranch
Eh.

The core Spotify audience is there solely for music and discovering more music.

Spotify shot itself in the foot throwing big bags at these podcast creators when the game is saturated. Too many to all eat decently.

And these days it’s all about the video “podcasts” that you can just watch on YouTube. Don’t even have to watch the shít — put the video on and listen to the audio.
 
Last edited:

Paper Boi

Veteran
Supporter
Joined
May 15, 2013
Messages
73,456
Reputation
24,593
Daps
479,925
Reppin
NULL
Eh.

The core Spotify audience is there solely for music and discovering more music.

Spotify shot itself in the foot throwing big bags at these podcast creators when the game is saturated. Too many to all eat decently.

And these days it’s all about the video “podcasts” that you can just watch on YouTube. Don’t even have to watch the shít — put the video on and listen to the audio.
it must be lucrative enough... with rogan and the largest podcasts... they made bill simmons a very rich mf..............

but yeah throwing the bag at any ol podcast was such a bad idea, especially for a paid music app.
 

Michael's Black Son

Blanket Jackson
Supporter
Joined
Sep 30, 2013
Messages
52,068
Reputation
15,134
Daps
229,283
Reppin
New York City & Neverland Ranch
it must be lucrative enough... with rogan and the largest podcasts... they made bill simmons a very rich mf..............

but yeah throwing the bag at any ol podcast was such a bad idea, especially for a paid music app.

Breh both of these dudes have built in followings + sponsors tripping over themselves to link with them. Even tho their audience is very specific, they cast a wide net and in Joe’s case the shock value of his fùckery pulls in casuals.

If we are keeping it 100, who is checking for Jemele on a wide scale. She was mid on ESPN but for 3 seconds her and Michael made folks thing they had the secret sauce — and they were wrong.

Podcast lane just ain’t for everyone.

We’re at this junction where people don’t wanna hear other people talk and talk because — in their minds — they have something of “value” to say.

You see it on social media. Random person films some 10 min video in their car about relationships. A lot of people are doing it. Then scale it up to the folks with ZERO experience on the mic but have bootleg podcasts — the NOREs, Fat Joes, Mase and Cam Rons of the game say “hey I can do that”

And it works for some but we are literally in the Babble Era. Everyone with an opinion and an asshòle and a smartphone.
 
Top