TBPN - GPT-5.6 Reactions, Phoebe Gates’ Phia Drama, Hollywood Chases Internet Horror | Diet TBPN
Episode Date: July 10, 2026Diet TBPN delivers the best of today’s TBPN episode in 30 minutes. TBPN is a live tech talk show hosted by John Coogan and Jordi Hays, streaming weekdays 11–2 PT on X and YouTube, with ea...ch episode posted to podcast platforms right after.Described by The New York Times as “Silicon Valley’s newest obsession,” the show has recently featured Mark Zuckerberg, Sam Altman, Mark Cuban, and Satya Nadella.TBPN is made possible by:Ramp - https://ramp.comPublic - https://public.comCisco - https://www.cisco.comConsole - https://www.console.comCrowdStrike - https://www.crowdstrike.comFigma - https://www.figma.comMongoDB - https://www.mongodb.comNYSE - https://www.nyse.comRailway - https://railway.comShopify - https://www.shopify.com/Follow TBPN: https://TBPN.comhttps://x.com/tbpnhttps://open.spotify.com/show/2L6WMqY3GUPCGBD0dX6p00?si=674252d53acf4231https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/technology-brothers/id1772360235https://www.youtube.com/@TBPNLive
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S.K. Heinex is up. Successful IPO, up 14% in the Wall Street debut. The South Korean memory chip giant,
S.K. Hinex made its NASDAQ debut today, raising $26.5 billion in the largest ever first-time U.S. share sale by a foreign company.
Demand reportedly exceeded the available shares more than sevenfold, but to give a sense of like,
the scale of this thing. Normally when we hear about 7x over subscribed IPOs, you might be expecting
like 100% pop, 80% pop. But at this level of price and demand, you're just seeing a 14% pop,
but still a great debut nonetheless. The company's American depository receipts opened,
the ADR shares, opened at 170, 14% above the 149 they were offered at, giving S.K.
Hinex a market cap of roughly $1.03 trillion. We got another one.
another one. Another trillion-dollar company in the AI boom.
The Blockbuster listing caps an extraordinary run for memory manufacturers fueled by surging demand from AI systems,
particularly for high bandwidth memory used alongside advanced AI accelerators.
S.K. Hynix, Samsung, U.S.-based Micron dominate the global memory market,
and S.K. Hynix's Korean listed shares are up over 600% in the past year.
Tyler, is that good?
rushed to gain exposure to one of the AI boom's most critical bottlenecks, but it's been tricky
to get shares and participate in SKHinex because you've got to go over to the Cospy.
You've got to go over to the South Korean index.
Instead, now you can just head to the NASDAQ and get your ADR shares in SK Hynex.
So congratulations to the whole team over there, a massively successful IPO.
The Wall Street Journal asks a question.
They say, why is S.K. Heinzks trading under a temporary ticker symbol?
They're currently trading under the temporary ticker, S-K-H-Y-V, before reverting to a permanent ticker on Monday, S-K-H-Y.
The V, in the temporary symbol, indicates the shares are trading on a when-issued basis.
They haven't been fully issued yet, meaning the exchange is allowing investors to buy and sell the stock on its first U.S. trading day before the transaction actually settles, because they're sort of being eased into the American markets.
This is not the case with all ADRs, all American depository receipts, but rather a tool used to close the gap when a transaction has been announced, but the actual delivery of the shares hasn't finished.
So all in process now to bring S.K. Hynix to the American markets.
And that looks like a lot of red, but the stock is up.
It just opened at 170.
And so the fact that it is flat relative to where it opened does not reflect the 14% pop or 16% pop.
What was it?
14% pop from the actual issuance price.
Most of the folks that bought shares in the IPO, that $26 billion that went into the company.
Of course, situational awareness.
There were a few others.
Bailey Gifford all participated early, at least reporting to early news.
I assume that those transactions closed.
They are all sitting up 14% today.
And we'll be continuing to follow this.
Canter in the chat says CERN has only been off for a week and John is dressing casual.
Ooh, you think it's a conspiracy. I like it. I like it.
5.6 launched yesterday, 5.6, Soul and Soul Ultra, and people are having fun with it.
More and more demos are hitting the timeline. There's a lot of controversy over the desktop app for Mac.
We can get into that. But first, let's play a little bit of this video.
Someone tried to recreate all of Interstellar, truly trying to infuriate Christopher Nolan the most, probably.
This is the exact opposite of what he wants to see, I imagine, considering that he doesn't even use CGI very often.
But this is an incredible demo, although I don't think this will be picking up a billion dollars at the box office anytime soon.
But it is incredible that you're able to sort of go from prompt to 3D model to rendering so quickly.
Very, very cool demo.
and it feels like a new meme, a new art form.
You have to be creative with it.
Merely recreating Interstellar is not going to do it.
It's not going to do anything other than just be an impressive demo of the technology,
but when you look at what people have done with Blender,
you can imagine that with creativity added to this in a new storyline
and something that leans into the rough edges of this particular technology.
Well, there's also going to be a whole meta of like I recreated Interstellar,
but I cast.
Connor McGregor as
Yeah, and I imagine
that this gets even more powerful
when you use style transfer
and video models on top.
I've been seeing a lot of people block out
AI videos either just using their iPhone
so they'll just have like you're playing an actor
who's playing like an old character
and then you're reading the lines, you're giving the delivery
and then that is used as the driving video
for some of these AI video models
and you get much better results.
with that. And I've also seen people block out little examples of driving scenes or different
mechanical scenes in Blender and then use an AI video model to take it to high fidelity. And because
the video model has an underlying reference that is deterministic and physically accurate,
even though it's low fidelity and very like blocky, you wind up with a better AI video at
the end of the project. So you can imagine someone taking an idea,
puppeteering a 3JS model like what's happening here,
and then adding basically a style transfer layer on top
with AI video to get to something that's a lot more photo reel
and more striking.
But again, you wind up in this situation
where you can go and recreate interstellar perfectly,
but at the end, you just have interstellar,
which already exists and is available to stream,
and so you didn't really get anything in the process.
You have to bring something special to the table.
but I'm excited for the inevitable mashups of this,
the Connor McGregor starring in Interstellar or something like that.
Also, there's a broccoli farmer that's running his farm on GPT's 5.6 apparently.
This was in the demo video, but Daniel Ten Rero shares a very funny meme showing the,
I don't even know what aesthetic this is.
This is the DeShare Zone aesthetic.
That was the account that shared all of this.
The extreme skeleton with the two revolving pistols.
Very fun. Danielson, Rero, share some more information. He says, we were promised flying cars, and instead we got a broccoli farmer running his farm with GPT 5.6. I don't know. It's still relevant to show a demo that is as far afield. Everyone knows how these models can be used for research, how these models can be used for coding. That gets a little boring. I want to imagine something completely different that I can then pull into my daily life. What is the equivalent task that I'm doing in my life that I can take? We sort of differ on this sometimes. You think that,
A lot of these things are self-explanatory.
They don't, this is Joe Wisenthal position, too.
This is like AI has no learning curve.
I disagree.
I think that it doesn't necessarily have a learning curve,
but there is an educational process that happens when you're presented with a blank box.
You can type anything.
People need to understand the fringes of their imagination, what is possible,
and then they can go and reach for that tool.
But the tools are getting sharper,
and sometimes they get sharper without the box actually changing.
Because it's just a box of what do you want to build or what do you want to do.
Yeah, not everyone has a Tyler where I tend to prompt Tyler.
Yes, yes, yes.
Goes into Codex.
Yes.
There was another video that was shaking up the timeline.
People were going back and forth on how fast this model was building in, is this Blender?
Blender.
This is Blender, right?
Yeah.
So it's building a 3D Canon, modeling it and adding different,
different primitives, different spheres and toruses.
And the video is not sped up.
And Chris says,
5.6 soul is, and what I assume is
750 tokens per second in the wild.
That is the preview of cerebrus.
But this apparently was not actually...
Yeah, it's Soul Ultra on fast mode.
So we should be seeing even faster rollouts, although every time I see this, I think.
And this is just computer use.
Yeah.
Like this is not like an integration.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It is an interesting experience watching a machine use your machine at a rate that would be completely impossible unless it was like your entire bit online was like, I just use software really fast.
Yeah.
It is, yeah, it's an interesting sort of feel-the-AGI moment.
Anyway, Packing McCormick is having fun with 5.6 soul.
He says it one-shoted this on its own.
He didn't ask for a new logo.
It's just like, look, bro, you need a new logo.
I actually think you should adopt this.
It looks cool.
I like it.
He says it's part of a web design based on a link to a cosmos.
Not perfect, but way better than any other time I've tried.
And that's been the big talking point is like they were behind.
on, or the GPT models were sort of behind on front end and design, and this is a big leap forward
in that. So I'm excited to see. Nick on the Codex team is asking is this image gen? I think it might be.
Well, I mean, that's the thing about Seoul and Codex. But it's been generating, it's been,
now if you're asking it to build a site, it will generate you a preview image.
Image. And so I think this is the preview image for the site. Yep. Which is.
But the really confusing thing is that the image model now has tool use and can scaffold things out
in HTML if it needs to.
And so like all of these different models
are sort of blending together at this point.
Michael had a very funny interaction
where he got banned for OpenAI for cyber abuse.
He had no idea what he did.
He pasted the band notice into Codex,
which I don't know how he was still using Codex
if he was banned, but he said he asked it to figure out
what triggered the ban.
Codex found that it had asked for an API key
to his own server.
Codex wrote the appeal, submitted the appeal. A few minutes later, the appeal was auto-approved by an AI at OpenAI.
So he was banned by AI, convicted by AI, defended by AI, and pardoned by AI in about 10 minutes.
There's a bunch of pushback on the new ChatGPT desktop app because it is the super app. It unifies Codex.
The new ChatGPT app is just the Codex app. And when you install it, you can keep the old ChatGPT app as ChatTTT
classic. But a lot of people don't like that because the Codex app is written in Electron,
which means it's a bunch of web views, web browsers, effectively, as opposed to the chatchiti
app, which was the native app, and had a bunch of integrations that people had sort of come to know
and love. And so this is like a change in the user experience if you're deeply embedded in a
particular workflow. The flip side is like, I just don't know how many people were daily driving
chat GPT as a Mac desktop app.
We've heard from someone on the team that was effective for cheating,
and we won't talk who it was.
So I would sometimes use it because there was like a very nice shortcut.
So it was like Control Plus or Command Plus is the normal main search on Mac.
But it was like a very easy way to interact with the models.
Yeah.
I wonder if that can just be, can that just be like can that shortcut just be created with the new codex?
or chat GPT work app where you just bind that same key shortcut.
But, I mean, it is making the user do work, which is always a tricky thing.
But I feel like for most people's workflow, at least for mine, it was the desktop app that I
used was codex.
And then when I wanted to interact with chat GPT in a chat flow, I would do a new tab.
And then on my phone, I would have the chat GPT app.
And then the chat GPT app on my phone could talk to codex on the desktop.
But I never actually needed to open the chatyptu.
GPD desktop app. But maybe I'm just weird, but I don't know. We'll see as this same
same flow for me. The one thing that is, we spent the last 24 hours reading feedback,
looking at usage patterns and talking with many of you. The short version is that there's a lot
of excitement for five six chat d. work on mobile and web, but we also didn't get
everything quite right. We made it too easy to use the highest compute settings without
making the impact on usage limits sufficiently clear. They reorganize the desktop app and
one bold move, making familiar things like chats and projects harder to find.
Our launch framing was focused on work, and to some of our Codex fans, it made it feel like
Codex was going away over time.
Absolutely not our intention.
We love Codex, and it is here to stay.
Long story short, reset.
Usage of limits are getting reset twice today, so people can keep experimenting.
Hammer.
Plan out some sites.
There's also some confusion over the difference between ChatGPD work and ChatGPD Codex.
And I wonder when...
I just want one place to do things.
Yeah, the Omni Box that can do anything for you.
Yeah.
And I think that's obviously where it goes, but there's a walk-crawl run,
there's integration points, and people have ingrained,
ingrained experiences and workflows and habits,
and there's all sorts of different trade-offs here.
There is no enterprise Google search.
Like, you just use Google at work, you use Google at home.
It's all one box that gives you answers.
And there was never like a dividing line between these two things.
And so that's probably where all of this goes ultimately.
Let's tell you about Kodax.
There we go.
Kodak is a powerful workspace for getting things done with AI agents,
whether you're writing code, analyzing data, creating content,
or automating business workflows.
Codex helps move projects forward from start to finish.
People are saying it's a horse for the mind.
A horse for mind.
So the meta-bulk case.
Semi-analysis wrote a long piece about the future of MSL, what's going on there.
Very interesting contrarian take.
I think a lot of people were confused by the expansion of activities and sort of an entirely new business line with B-to-B sales.
And we've discussed the bull cases here, the benefits.
Obviously, there's a ton of benefits with the ad model.
They have the cash flow to draw down on.
There's a lot of different things that we can go through.
But let's read some of the reactions first, and then we can go into the same.
the analysis piece. So boring business says people don't realize that Zuckerberg is all in on
AI because he refuses to pay a 30% tax to platform owners for the rest of his life. Meta caught
the shift toward mobile back in the early 2010s, but they were never able to create their
own hardware platform to capture users in their ecosystem. As a result, they got stuck paying a 30%
tax to Apple on in-app purchases, which has cost meta billions of dollars in profit. That makes no sense
me.
No one buys ads via in-app purchases.
Every advertiser I know uses the web-based ad manager.
Also, I add ads, I believe, count as like a real-world service.
So there's not, like there's a lot of things you order in the, that you order on mobile
apps, like groceries.
It's kind of a digital good, but yes, I agree with you that it would be exactly.
Yeah, but it's like eyeballs, right?
It's like impressions, uh, which, which like eyeballs.
Yes.
Human attention is not a digital good.
It is like a real world thing.
Yes.
So if I open up the Amazon app on my iPhone and I buy a t-shirt, Apple does not get 30% of that because that's a real world.
Or DoorDash.
Or DoorDash.
Good example.
Or a movie ticket.
Yes.
But if I go to Kindle or Netflix and I subscribe or even like the X subscription premium, Apple will take 30% if I buy Fortnite Vee.
bucks or Roblox or any digital good.
And I could see Apple saying, look, if you want to be able to, because in the in the meta platforms,
you can be in Instagram and you can just say, I want to boost this post.
And you can put down your credit card and pay for that.
And you can get started on the advertising flow as a very small business.
I think through effectively in app purchases.
Yeah.
So maybe the bigger, the bigger thing is just like, you have this one of the largest
companies in the world.
Yeah, yeah.
And you have to constantly be playing nice and sort of sucking up to Apple, who is sort of
actively, who doesn't like you.
Like Apple, like you can imagine, what do Apple executives think about meta if you were
to ask them over coffee off the record?
And it would be like, we don't like meta.
And so that's fundamentally like a very, very uncomfortable position to be in.
And so he doesn't want to be in a position running his company where he's.
He has to ask for permission for things.
And so an example with that, somebody brought it up, I think Andrew.
Meta lost billions from Apple because of the permissions prompt.
Yes, that's true.
You know, making it harder to just run their core advertising business.
Yeah.
And also there's so much that's like very unpredictable about where AI is going.
Like it's possible that we get to the point where you don't go to a bunch of different social media platforms.
And you're just like talk, your agent is just kind of surf.
for saying content for you on the fly.
Like there's so much like potential disruption.
I think the stance is like I would rather participate in this massive technology cycle
and have a shot at being a big part of it.
Yeah.
Then like just like hope nothing bad happens to me.
The other thing I've always felt is like, you know, with the with the glasses,
you're just going to be able to like he sees a world.
Like the glasses are more of a new platform bet right now than AI.
and I just think he wants to be in a world where you're wearing your very, very cheap pair
or maybe even free pair of glasses around.
They act as your phone and your computer, and you can look at stuff and say,
buy me that, and he's getting a cut of it.
You're walking by a restaurant, and it pops up an offer,
and it says, like, free boba for any orders over $20, and he's getting a cut of that, right?
So, like, that will be, like, some type of, like, always on intelligence.
So it all totally makes sense, even if it is like deeply sort of like chaotic and at times confusing, at least over the last year.
The funny thing about the glasses as a platform is AI spending is so huge that he can probably bring back a lot of the reality lab spending and sort of just tuck it in a bucket and people won't notice if there's an extra 80.
I'm not leaving. I'm not leaving. I'm not leaving. I'm not. Yeah. I mean, if.
There's an extra $8 billion spent on the next version of the meta-rayban displays or something.
People will be like, ah, it's a rounding air compared to the 200 billion on data centers or whatever.
Ari says the tax meta pays to Apple is the fact that they can't track users cross-platform.
Yeah, yeah, totally.
The other interesting thing is, like, I do think the screen time is at least like a flashing warning light.
Like, I personally noticed as an early adopter of LLMs that my screen time has,
switched much more towards chat GPT and LLMs and deep research reports, just because if I see
something interesting, oh, there's a, there's a car video on Instagram, we'll often switch over
and then start prompting to actually learn more, whereas before that would have required a whole
bunch of Google searches, you might have to sit down and like collect a document, like you're not
actually going to do that. Now I've been noticing that I'm much more in like the hour a day on
Chachapitee versus hour a day on Instagram. And so I don't know if I'm just like the early
adopter that will never do that, but you can certainly see that people are spending a lot of
time with AI systems. And as you've put it before, like wherever consumers, wherever people are
spending time is an important place to have a foothold at least.
Semi analysis said at the simplest level, there are three things you need to build it to
need to build a true frontier model, data talent and compute. We believe meta is the only
hyperscaler slash neolab on track to be working.
world class at all three and therefore has the best chance at catching up with
Anthropics slash OpenAI. We'll explain why in full detail below. And so Alex Wang
quoted this in a funny way. He said compute daddy. Dylan Patel has spoken. And yes,
the stock is up 6%. Wang quoted polyquoted polymarket money, which said meta jumps over 6% of the
and as investors react to yesterday's Muse Spark 1.1 release.
Again, I don't really think that they were reacting to Muse Spark as much as
semi-analysis saying there's a there's a really good thing.
So, yeah, Alex Wang said nice with the thumbs up.
So he's pumping the stock.
What's interesting is like the crazy thing is that like semi-analysis just like completely
leaving out SpaceX and.
They didn't leave out SpaceX and Google.
They said...
But saying...
They said SpaceX is selling $26 billion a year worth of GPUs to Anthropics slash Google,
and that's why they're not in the race.
Even though it is odd because Meta might wind up selling a lot of GPUs,
it's sort of unclear what the breakdown will be,
but they're at least laying out a narrative that if meta picks it up,
would differentiate them from SpaceX AI in some ways, I think.
Yeah.
I agree with you.
It is a lot of things that folks are like.
Gemini doesn't have,
because Gemini has compute.
Yep.
And data.
Yeah.
They're saying,
they're effectively saying Gemini does not have talent.
Yeah.
Right?
They're saying you need all three.
Meta took their data efforts to another level in late May by announcing a new applied
AI engineering org as part of their most recent round of layoffs restructuring.
3,000 engineers,
which includes 70% of their new grads and a significant number of seniors will now be making
RL tasks and environments full-time. We think this is an extremely underappreciated advantage for
MSL. The question is, if this becomes the standard playbook, you would imagine that Google DeepMind
would be able to do the same thing. They have the same structural workforce, but maybe it's like
it's a band-aid that Google's not willing to rip off, but Zuck is willing to rip it off at
meta. That's maybe the thesis at a deeper level. Anthropic has been the most aggressive lab by far
when it comes to buying coding data from RL environment startups,
and it's one important reason why their models are so good at coding today.
Mercor recently disclosed that they logged 2.5 million expert hours on their platform in Q2 of 2026.
That's equivalent to 5,000 people working 40 hours a week.
Meta is already in the same ballpark, and their average quality is likely higher.
Additionally, they have another 70,000 people to pull into that organization if they need to,
if it winds up being as valuable as semi-analysis thinks it will be.
It's also worth briefly dispelling this myth that 3,000 meta-engineers will be doing mindless, low-level data labeling.
The days of undereducated contractors from third-world countries, drawing boundary boxes or classifying text as NSFW are gone.
At this point, the models are sufficiently smart that creating a good piece of training data is a real intellectual challenge.
So they're sort of taking the contrarian stance that, you know, being an RL environment designer is not,
soul-crushing and in fact can be intellectually rigorous. They also say that the top expert
contractors at every data company, they're all making seven figures a year, which is pretty
crazy since people thought of data labeling as a $10 an hour task. And now you have people making
millions of dollars a year because they're actually really great at defining what it means
to complete a task from start to bed. We got to talk about Fia Gate, the story that is at the center
of Phoebe Gates's life. Her company, Fia, is in Bloomberg today with some accusations of
misattribution in the e-commerce world. Fia, the buzzy shopping app, co-founded by Bill Gates's
daughter, Phoebe, is claiming credit for online sales that didn't actually drive.
An advertising startup co-founded by Phoebe Gates, daughter of billionaire Microsoft Corp,
co-founder Bill Gates, bills itself as a personal shopping assistant that helps you
users find the lowest prices on a broad range of clothes and fashion accessories.
Businesses like these, known in industry parlance as affiliate marketing programs,
typically collect commission from retailers that make the resulting sale.
Bloomberg tested the FIA mobile browser extension across more than 50 websites and found that
during the checkout process, FIA opened a background tab without user interaction and injected
its own referral code that overrode legitimate referrals from other publishers.
These findings were consistent with Capital One Shopping and Edelman's Independent Testing and Code Review.
Let's get into why what he is being accused of and why it is potentially if this is what they're doing.
We don't know, again, if it's an accident or it's intentional, but why it's potentially even more predatory than honey.
So Megalag, the YouTuber that did the Honey Exposet, it was an interesting deep dive that got 20 million views because it was using a hidden redirect near checkout to replace the creators' affiliate tag with honeies.
So the irony here was that a lot of those creators, they would make money from, I'm promoting AG1, use code, Huberman.
And then if they had also promoted Honey, Honey was stealing their AG1 affiliate revenue.
and so the creators were sort of promoting their own demise in some way.
So it was like this very viral, very ironic situation eventually got sorted out.
Honey's broader scandal also involved allegation that it suppressed better coupons and
deliberately evaded affiliate network stand-down checks.
Nothing comparably extensive has yet been established about FIA.
But FIA's reported implementation may actually be cruder.
Honey generally created the overwrite when the shopper interacted with
it's checkout prompt, even if only to dismiss it.
So you would see a honey pop up.
At the very least, you had to click, I don't want honey, and then it would do something.
The Bloomberg report says FIA's mobile extension is firing without any FIA interaction at all.
So you go from horse reviews.com over to Clydesdale's direct.
You merely have FIA install as an extension.
You don't notice anything.
You don't know that FIA has been a part of the interaction at all.
You don't know.
You just click through, but you have a software running in your browser that is inserting a effectively attribution for FIA without you knowing.
Yep. Stealing potential revenue from horsereviews.com.
Yes.
And horse reviews.com probably had to run ads on Google to get people to horse reviews.com to educate them on the horse market, to get them to Clydesdale's direct, to get them to close.
And so they're sitting here being like, hey, we did all this work.
to get Clydesdale's direct.com a new customer, and we're not being compensated for it.
And Collinsdale's Direct might say, well, normally I'm sending a check to horse reviews.com.
I guess I'm sending a check to Fia now, whatever, as long as I'm getting customers, I'm fine.
So one of the concerning things here is that I think this has been running since like January or December.
And so they had some software update that was pushed.
This started happening.
Yeah.
So it's been happening for, let's say, around six months.
Yeah.
And you would assume that they would have figured this out.
But maybe it's possible that it, you know.
I don't know.
A lot of, I mean, it's not the biggest scale.
I think the number is 12 million plus in sales driven.
So the commission on that is like $1 million that's sort of like missing.
And it's so diffuse across so many different e-commerce providers.
I guarantee you, as someone who's run multiple e-commerce sites,
I would not notice if a couple hundred dollars moved from one affiliate to another.
Now, everyone on the timeline was praying on Phoebe's downfall.
Way before this.
People wanted this so badly.
They didn't want to hear this be a success.
And so they've been chomping at the bit for something.
She raised money from a lot of very popular celebrities, and it looked like a Coachella poster.
And there's all these like, oh, like, why are we?
even raising venture capital. So our theory is that this is where the comeback begins.
The villain arc. The villain arc, potentially. But seriously, okay, let's go over to movies.
Hollywood's horror meme gold rush is minting millionaires. We talked about this with backrooms,
the originally 4chan creepy pasta that wound up being a viral YouTube channel. And then
a full Hollywood movie that made over $100 million, I believe. But there are many more
pieces of intellectual property in the whore meme genre, and they're all getting scooped up.
That was a Hormosey, by the way.
It did look like Hormosey.
It did look like Hormosey.
So the creator of a monster called Siren Head scores a rich deal as studios hunt for the
next backroom style hit in the Wall Street Journal.
Trevor Henderson drew a faceless monster called Siren Head eight years ago.
That's pretty creepy.
I'm not a fan.
Eight years ago and watched it spawned YouTube films, knockoff Amazon.
dot com merchandise and video games, but he never made a penny from his creation. Interesting.
He just spawned this horrific meme and then hadn't profited on it until now. So he's a 40-year-old
illustrator and he sold the Sirenhead movie rights to Warner Brothers for more than a million
dollars. Pretty cool that he just illustrated this weird thing and then made so much money.
According to people familiar with the matter, the deal was part of a new Hollywood gold rush
to find concepts and talent online that could fuel the next horror hit.
like backrooms and obsession.
Studios are trying to find the next potential horror hit
that already has proven its appeal to Gen Z on YouTube, Reddit,
or this is interesting, Roblox.
The chair, co-chair of Warner's Motion Picture Group,
Michael DeLuca said,
we're seeing them as a resource for adaptations
the same way we look at books and other media.
The race for hot digital properties resembles
the kind of dogfights for buzzy scripts
that used to be common in Hollywood
during the 80s and 90s.
11 studios recently bid on the film rights
to the psychological horror YouTube
series, the Mandela catalog. Amazon owned United Artists and Steven Spielberg's Amblin Entertainment
ultimately agreed to pay millions of dollars and let the video's 22-year-old creator Alex Kister
direct the movie. That's very interesting. Daniel says, what's the obsession with horror?
There's something wrong with you if you're into that. Totally agree. I never gravitated to horror
movies, but my theory was always, if I don't watch them, I won't be afraid walking at night.
Like I grew up in the country, you know, teenager in the country, you know, you're going around on adventures, stuff like that.
Don't watch this.
You're going to be terrified.
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