Episodi

  • Kids Media Club: Guest Jesse Cleverly on the perfect media storm incoming
    Jan 15 2026

    The landscape of children's entertainment is shifting—fast. In this eye-opening conversation, multi-award-winning creative executive Jesse Cleverly shares why now might be the perfect time to work in media, despite all the doom and gloom.

    The Perfect Storm (In a Good Way)

    Jesse drops a perspective bomb early in the conversation: while traditional media is facing seismic changes, he genuinely believes we're entering "an interesting and great moment" for the industry. Why? Because creators no longer need permission to build audiences.

    "If you've got a great idea or you are a great creator, you can go out and learn what works," Jesse explains. The empowering nature of new platforms means you can test and refine before spending €10 million on a 50-episode series. Revolutionary? Absolutely.

    The Creator Burnout Crisis

    But it's not all sunshine and viral videos. Jesse pulls back the curtain on a troubling reality: many successful digital creators are exhausted and burned out, trapped in a world of low CPMs (cost per thousand views) with no sustainable revenue model beyond grinding out content.

    The solution? Studios and creators need each other now more than ever. Traditional media professionals bring crucial skills in brand development, monetization, and long-term value creation that many creators desperately need but don't have the bandwidth to develop themselves.

    Rethinking the "Kids' Audience"

    Here's where Jesse gets provocative: he questions whether the traditional definition of a "kids' audience" was actually created by commercial television rather than reflecting what children genuinely want.

    His evidence? When given true choice, kids increasingly watch content made for broader audiences. His own research revealed young viewers gravitating toward shows like "Heartland" (a Canadian horse ranch drama) because there's "no punching and killing"—not because it was marketed to them as children's programming.

    "I wonder whether this definition of the kid audience is also a product that we used for media in the commercial television age," Jesse muses, challenging fundamental assumptions about age-appropriate content.

    The Power of Niches

    Forget mass audiences—Jesse sees the future in passionate, engaged communities around specific interests. His favorite example? Werewolf romance fiction is "killing it" with tens of millions of readers, yet virtually no one is creating werewolf video content.

    The math is simple: going from broad, low-engagement audiences to narrow, high-engagement niches means higher lifetime value (LTV) per fan. Plus, we're not limited to local markets anymore—you can reach every werewolf romance fan in the world.

    "The goldfish and the water," Jesse says. "We've been swimming in the world of low-hanging fruit local markets. We're not in local markets now—we're in the world."

    5 Key Takeaways
    1. Permission is Dead: You don't need a commissioner's approval to build an audience anymore. Create, test, learn, iterate—then scale.
    2. Creators Need Studios (and Vice Versa): Digital creators have audiences but often lack monetization expertise. Traditional media professionals have those skills but need to understand platform-native content.
    3. Value Has Shifted: Historical kids' media companies like Nickelodeon made most of their money from licensing and merchandising, not the TV shows themselves. That model still works—just on different platforms.
    4. Rethink Your Audience: Age-based demographic targeting may be a...
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    55 min
  • Kids Media Club: New Year, New Youtube Regulations
    Jan 8 2026

    In this episode we discuss the evolving regulatorary landscape around kids content on YouTube and social media. The wild west era of children's content on YouTube appears to be coming to an end. As countries worldwide move toward stricter social media regulations—France announcing September 2026 enforcement, Virginia implementing new protections—YouTube's AI-powered content moderation is creating uncertainty for creators in the kids' space.

    Key Takeaways

    The Regulatory Shift: After years of minimal oversight, 2026 looks set to bring significant changes to how children's content is managed online. Multiple jurisdictions are finally catching up to long-standing concerns about kids and social media.

    YouTube's Opaque AI System: YouTube's AI now determines whether content is "suitable" for young audiences, but the decision-making process remains unclear. Creators face potential demonetization or restricted reach without understanding the benchmarks, making commercial viability increasingly risky.

    The "Social-Only" Gamble: Creators who went all-in on YouTube as their sole platform now face a precarious position. Diversification across multiple platforms—once considered smart strategy—is becoming essential again as the regulatory landscape shifts.

    BBC's Opportunity: As YouTube becomes a financially high-risk space for quality kids content, publicly funded broadcasters like the BBC have a chance to prove their value. Charter renewal debates may gain new context when commercial platforms struggle to sustainably serve young audiences.

    Content Duration Concerns: The rise of ultra-short-form content raises questions about optimal viewing lengths for developing brains. Even tech founders are reportedly limiting their own children's screen time—yet clear benchmarks remain elusive.

    Bottom Line: The permissive era of creators freely making kids' content on YouTube is closing. Welcome to the new regulated reality.

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    37 min
  • Kids Club Podcast Year in Review: our standout conversations from 2025
    Jan 1 2026

    In this special New Year episode of the Kids Club Podcast, we reflect on our favourite Podcast conversations of 2025 and share eight moments that stood out for us from the year.

    We revisit conversations with industry professionals who share honest insights on being transparent and staying scrappy in tough times.

    Featured Topics:

    1. Building resilience as a content creator in 2026
    2. The importance of self-advocacy for aspiring creators
    3. Breaking through in a competitive creative environment
    4. Practical advice from writers, producers, and industry professionals

    This year-end episode we highlight key takeaways from guests who opened up about the realities of working in kids media in 2025.

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    25 min
  • 🎄 Kids Media Club: Christmas Special 2025
    Dec 18 2025

    The team dives into Netflix's Christmas movie dominance, shares heartwarming holiday TV traditions from around the world (including Ireland's legendary Late Late Toy Show), and makes bold predictions for 2026's animation landscape. Spoiler: sequels reign supreme, and Australia's social media ban for kids could reshape the creator economy.

    Episode Breakdown🎅 Netflix's Christmas Movie Empire

    Emily kicks things off celebrating Netflix's "pure and lovely" commitment to churning out Christmas content. This year brought Champagne Problems, My Secret Santa, and Jingle Bell High Speed, with classics like Klaus (Jo's favorite from 2018) getting their annual boost.

    Key insight: Christmas is genius brand strategy—it's an open-source brand everyone can leverage. Andy points out it's smart business too, giving A-list talent a chance to do "something warmer and family-friendly" while earning sweet residuals that come back every year.

    Cultural gem alert: Emily introduces the Late Late Toy Show, an Irish institution that's been running longer than US late-night shows. Picture kids staying up past midnight to watch toy reviews, celebrity surprises (Roy Keane hassling kids this year!), and wholesome chaos. It's basically a three-hour commercial that somehow works because it's cultural heritage.

    🎬 2026 Animation Predictions

    The hosts get into crystal ball mode for next year's releases:

    Andy's calls:

    • Toy Story 5 - Will dominate (though Emily wonders if Lightyear's underwhelming performance signals franchise fatigue)
    • Hoppers (Pixar's robot-consciousness-transfer story) - Will underperform and struggle to cut through
    • Live-action Moana - Big winner, demonstrating the power of established IP

    The Illumination juggernaut: Super Mario Galaxy movie + Minions 3 dropping in 2026 could net them $2-3 billion at the box office. Emily notes we're firmly in a "sequel world."

    The dark horse: Disney's Hex (November 2026) about a teenage boy discovering magical powers. Emily thinks there's appetite for well-executed magic content after Spellbound missed the mark.

    📱 The Creator Economy Shake-Up

    Emily gets passionate about YouTube kids creators needing to "hold their nerve" on streaming deals. The economics have gotten tougher since YouTube's COPPA restrictions five years ago made it harder for mid-tier creators to sustain careers.

    The Australia wildcard: The social media ban for under-16s could be a game-changer. While challenging for creators, Emily sees it as "tough medicine" that might force better economic models and push creators toward premium streaming deals. YouTube Kids could become more crucial, and platforms like Discord might benefit unexpectedly.

    Miss Rachel mention: As an example of intentional content strategy—no shorts, calm and steady vibes, less dopamine-focused approach that resonates with parents.

    🎤 Wild Cards & Sign-Offs

    The hosts wrap with a joke about whether the wheels will come off the Kids Media Club podcast itself in 2026 (they won't), and acknowledge it's been "a busy year" with their heads "slightly blown off" by industry moves like Netflix buying Warner Brothers studios.


    Quotable Moments

    "Christmas is a brand that nobody owns and everybody can leverage." - Emily on Netflix's strategy

    "I want 5,000, not a fiver. It's renting the audience I've built." - Jo on creator economics

    "Sometimes...

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    35 min
  • Kids Media Club: Netflix Buys Warner Bros and What It Means for Kids Media
    Dec 11 2025

    The Kids Media Club crew tackles the biggest media story in years: Netflix's acquisition of Warner Brothers. Andy and Jo dive deep into what this seismic deal means for streaming, cinema, theme parks, and most importantly—the future of kids' content production. From Harry Potter to DC Comics, and from theatrical releases to original programming, they unpack the winners, losers, and uncertain future facing producers everywhere.

    Key Takeaways

    🎯 Why Netflix Wanted Warner Bros

    • Unlocks merchandise and theme parks—two areas Netflix never had access to
    • Adds massive legacy IP including Harry Potter, DC Universe, and Cartoon Network
    • Completes Netflix's transformation from tech company to full-spectrum entertainment studio

    🎬 Cinema Under Threat

    • Warner Bros films are tentpoles of the theatrical box office
    • Netflix's anti-cinema stance could devastate theater chains
    • Two-week window releases might become the new normal, worrying directors like James Cameron

    📺 The Producer's Dilemma

    • One fewer independent buyer in an already consolidated market
    • Netflix may focus budget on legacy IP management rather than original programming
    • Could producers be waiting years for attention to shift back to new shows?

    🏢 Industry Consolidation Accelerates

    • Paramount's hostile counter-bid adds drama to an already complex situation
    • UK broadcasters (BBC, Channel 4, ITV, Sky) may follow with their own mergers
    • The era of distinctive brand voices (Cartoon Network vs Nickelodeon vs Disney) may be ending

    🎪 The Walmart Effect

    • Netflix becomes the "entertainment supermarket"—so big it can't have a distinctive voice
    • Homogenization risk: will everything start to feel the same?
    • The monopoly question intensifies as the third-biggest streamer disappears

    ⚡ Wild Cards

    • What happens to CNN under Netflix ownership?
    • Could this deal actually be blocked on monopoly grounds?

    Bottom Line: This isn't just a business deal—it's a fundamental reshaping of how entertainment gets made, distributed, and consumed. For kids' content creators, the golden age of multiple competing buyers may be coming to an end.

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    44 min
  • KMC: special guest Louis Grenier's no punches pulled take on kids media
    Dec 4 2025

    Episode Summary: Andy, Jo, and Emily are joined by marketeer and 'recovering French man' Louis Grenier to give an outside perspective on kids media. Louis delivers his inimitable no-holds-barred take on the industry—expect sweary spikiness and truth bombs about what's really going on in children's content.

    Key Discussion Points:

    • Ethical marketing practices in children's content
    • How media consumption affects kids
    • Using creativity to differentiate in a competitive market
    • Creating meaningful, responsible content for young audiences

    Guest Expert: Louis Grenier shares marketing insights and fresh perspectives on kids' media

    Hosts: Emily Horgan, Jo Redfern, and Andy Williams (Kids Media Club podcast)

    https://www.kidsmediaclubpodcast.com/

    https://creativelycurious.substack.com/

    https://thekidsstreamersphere.substack.com/

    https://joredfern1.substack.com/

    Louis Grenier’s website

    https://www.stfo.io/about




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    54 min
  • Kids Media Club: guest, Louie Stowell on why children’s publishing needs more anarchy
    Nov 27 2025

    Author Louie Stowell (Loki series) joins the Kids Media Club to make the case for more chaos in children's books. Why do young readers crave mischief? How do illustrated books hook reluctant readers? And what's killing kids' love of reading—spoiler: it's not TikTok.

    Key Takeaways:

    • Mischievous characters create powerful entry points for emerging readers
    • Illustrations aren't just for "struggling" readers—they're a legitimate storytelling medium
    • Testing culture is crushing reading joy (and what we can do about it)
    • Give kids real choice in what they read—it matters more than you think
    • Children's publishing needs more risk-taking, diversity, and yes, anarchy

    https://louiestowell.com/

    https://www.kidsmediaclubpodcast.com/

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    49 min
  • Kids Media Club: The YouTube challenge for Kids IP Creators (listener’s digest episode)
    Nov 20 2025

    In this special listener's digest episode, we examine the challenges and opportunities of creating children's content on YouTube. We listen back to three creators who shared their experiences navigating COPPA regulations, monetization struggles, and strategies for building sustainable businesses in the current digital landscape.

    Key Guests
    • Melly Buse - Boutique content producer discussing COPPA's impact
    • Cory Williams - Creator of Silly Crocodile, a YouTube-first kids IP
    • Nic Cabana - Claynosaurz, discussing transmedia approaches

    Major ThemesThe COPPA Crisis

    COPPA regulations have devastated YouTube revenue for children's content, with some creators experiencing drops from £8,000 per month to just £300. Channels marked as "made for kids" earn approximately 20 times less than adult content, making sustainable production nearly impossible through YouTube revenue alone.

    The Monetization Reality

    Despite impressive metrics, revenue remain a challenge. Silly Crocodile, with nearly a million subscribers and 13 million monthly views, earns only $5,300 per month - highlighting the stark disconnect between engagement and revenue for kids content.

    Survival Strategies

    Diversification is Essential: Creators must expand into merchandising, publishing, and retail distribution. Platform dependency is increasingly risky.

    Transmedia Approach: Claynosaurz creates content across multiple platforms simultaneously. Their 39-episode series uses seven-minute formats optimized for YouTube while remaining adaptable for European distribution and streaming.

    Building in Public: Successful creators involve audiences early in development, building trust through authentic behind-the-scenes content - similar to Peter Jackson's Lord of the Rings development journals.

    Creator-Led Model: Direct audience relationships and active community management are crucial, with founders maintaining presence "in the trenches" to gather feedback.

    Key Takeaways
    1. YouTube alone won't pay the bills - Diversify revenue through licensing, merchandising, and distribution
    2. COPPA decimated revenue without clearly improving child safety
    3. Meet audiences where they are - Success requires content across multiple platforms, not single-format bets
    4. Community is currency - Early fan engagement creates loyal audiences and valuable feedback
    5. Think transmedia from day one - Don't build for just TV or film; build for everywhere

    The Bottom Line

    Creating successful kids IP on YouTube requires resilience and strategic diversification. While revenue challenges are severe, creators who embrace transmedia strategies, build authentic communities, and operate outside traditional studio models can still thrive.



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    22 min