How Dropout went from CollegeHumor to media powerhouse

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Fast Company

Fast Company

Күн бұрын

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@harsha1306
@harsha1306 3 ай бұрын
Sam sticking to the dying company really makes his "I've been here the whole time" catchphrase hit much harder than it needs to
@davidjrae
@davidjrae 3 ай бұрын
Damn. You making this point hit much harder than it needs to.
@LordJuan4
@LordJuan4 3 ай бұрын
@@davidjrae Damn. You making this point hit much harder than it needs to.
@tonilazuto3228
@tonilazuto3228 3 ай бұрын
Dam, I'm harder than I need to be.
@ThePyroSquirrel1
@ThePyroSquirrel1 3 ай бұрын
Damn yall are harder than yall need to be
@barefeetz4977
@barefeetz4977 3 ай бұрын
I've been hard the whole time
@twistedtoast3538
@twistedtoast3538 3 ай бұрын
I love how dropout advertizes. When planning and making shows, they make them with the hopes of being able to take short 20-second clips from them and just putting those on social media. They dont have to pay for advertising, and they get people hooked on just raw content until it convinces them to go all in. Really great
@francomuscellini1744
@francomuscellini1744 3 ай бұрын
They also put like the first ep of every season of all shows on KZbin. That's how they got me.
@alxjones
@alxjones 3 ай бұрын
@@francomuscellini1744 Same. When I saw the first Game Changer come out on KZbin, I was immediately sold. Game shows, comedy, and mystery/twists are like my three favorite things in media, and this nailed that balance _extremely_ well.
@theblasphemousbear
@theblasphemousbear 3 ай бұрын
I have to say that it works really well. I have literally never been tempted to subscribe to a streaming service by any advertising besides Dropout's.
@voss9842
@voss9842 3 ай бұрын
I consistently find out about new drops that I need to watch through youtube shorts. “Oh I haven’t seen this Game Changer episode. Time to login to Dropout”
@user-ow1bc4sx2r
@user-ow1bc4sx2r 3 ай бұрын
It works really well too I am on the brink of buying a subscription that is a poor financial decision for me lmao
@GuilhermeToscano
@GuilhermeToscano 3 ай бұрын
"You've made a home where my favorite people get to show the world how brilliant and amazing they are", this Brennan's quote about Sam always brings me to tears and inspires me.
@ANunes06
@ANunes06 3 ай бұрын
"You are a *perfect* American." - Ally "Chaosgoblin" Beardsley
@J6hn
@J6hn 3 ай бұрын
The word "home" does more in that statement than it seems at first
@Kasiarzynka
@Kasiarzynka 3 ай бұрын
I was thinking about that quote from Brennan throughout this video but I did not expect actually reading it would make my eyes wet, the same way it did when watching that episode. You can just tell just by watching the way they interact that while this might be their workplace and Sam might be their boss, they all have so much appreciation and love for one another and it makes me second hand happy, without knowing any of them personally, to see these great, positive people who can pretty much do what they love, alongside other amazing people they clearly like to work with, in a safe environment. Now, I obviously don't know what's going on behind the scenes, right, but at least that's the impression I get from watching them. Hearing Sam talk about the business model and how it's never profit for the sake of profit, or growth for the sake of growth, honestly makes so much sense, and it definitely shows. There's just so much quality in every episode they craft that you can tell they do it because they're passionate about it, not to squeeze in a few extra thousand at the end of the year. Wish there were more companies like this.
@he.said.teenjiejer
@he.said.teenjiejer 3 ай бұрын
ally’s words of “you are the perfect american” are just as touching
@caseyhull6120
@caseyhull6120 3 ай бұрын
Dropout gives me the same feeling Bon Appetit did during the Pandemic, but you can see the difference in how the company itself is run and built, and how Sam's level of involvement keeps it honest.
@Van-dq4sw
@Van-dq4sw 3 ай бұрын
I think that, consciously or not, Sam remaining an integral part of the cast of his company via his hosting of Game Changer and such helps keep him grounded in the company, in a way a lot of other CEOs of perhaps larger companies might start to lose over time. It's why they have the whole "undercover boss" concept in other places, to see how the employees are actually doing beyond just numeric projections and staff evaluation reports - Sam IS an employee, in some ways. He's gotta show up to makeup on time, deal with tech issues, run through rehearsals. It's a clever way of keeping from becoming "out of touch", and gives me hope for the longevity of Dropout.
@zoeyjordansalsbury3450
@zoeyjordansalsbury3450 3 ай бұрын
This is a very excellent thought! Thank you for sharing!
@katemorris8442
@katemorris8442 3 ай бұрын
I fully agree. It references old entertainment like theatre companies, where the head of the company was also a content creator. It also allows for creative initiative to take priority, because in media, good content treated well will work every time.
@helenm1085
@helenm1085 3 ай бұрын
I think that's how Loading Ready Run has been successful for 20 years now (although they are a much smaller company)
@gemie72
@gemie72 3 ай бұрын
It also changes how I view the company. With other companies I might pirate or decide to ask around for a login bc it would all go to a faceless CEO anyway - but with Dropout I’m like “I want to help Sam and his creative endeavors.” Same thing with them having a pretty small crew of onscreen cast members and doing behind the scenes stuff so you understand all the work that goes into what they do
@Jedi_Vigilante
@Jedi_Vigilante 3 ай бұрын
If I could choose my own boss, there are only two "well-known" company owners I would choose: Sam Reich, and Jason "Thor" Hall. Mostly for the exact reasons you describe.
@bangormc3rd562
@bangormc3rd562 3 ай бұрын
It's a shame we live in a world where respecting employees, fostering creativity, and making reasonable goals is the exception, rather than the norm.
@Demmrir
@Demmrir 3 ай бұрын
I blame MBAs and shareholders/the stock market as a whole.
@Khronogi
@Khronogi 3 ай бұрын
Stock market means we take our wealth and invest it in companies that ​are not even in our neighborhoods. Then, because we rely on that wealth for retirement, we can only accept it going up. That alone is detrimental to a functioning community. @@Demmrir
@Joker8pie
@Joker8pie 3 ай бұрын
@@Demmrir the stock market has been a plague on art since its creation
@quarternipp
@quarternipp 3 ай бұрын
@@Demmrir don't forget lobbyists and corporate executives who view these types of companies for what they bring in financially. no matter how good and popular the content is, they'll axe it if it's no longer making them exorbitant amounts of money.
@CSeraphym
@CSeraphym 3 ай бұрын
Oh, 100%. I think it's interesting that Sam noted that all the upper people at Dropout are creative people, they don't have a finance person pushing for cost saving measures or growth. It reminds me of how Boeing has really fallen, and most of it can be traced to their management who previously had engineering backgrounds getting replaced by management from finance. It's also interesting how Sam is focused on slow sustainable healthy growth. These are the kinds of decisions that I don't think you can make in a publicly traded company. At least not anymore.
@ejaybugboy3yt
@ejaybugboy3yt 3 ай бұрын
During a time when lesser people would've crumbled and the company would've been lost to time, Sam stepped up and saved it and all of his employees and friends. For that I am eternally grateful because Dropout is one of my favorite things on the internet.
@brewdaly1873
@brewdaly1873 3 ай бұрын
I think Brennan's "compliment" to Sam in Second Place is 100% true. He really has created a space for extremely talented people to show off their skills. I wish more CEO's were like Sam.
@ejaybugboy3yt
@ejaybugboy3yt 3 ай бұрын
@@brewdaly1873 The world would be a much better place if even half the CEOs in the world had the amount of love and care Sam has for his employees.
@jadeyu7197
@jadeyu7197 3 ай бұрын
this 100% the loyalty Sam has for his employees, friends, and even us viewers is truly through the roof! i remember the time they upped the price of the subscription and they made sure old subscribers understood that they weren't being affected by this change. As someone who isn't from the US and whose currency is less than the dollar, I truly appreciate that.
@Halfdrunkpadre
@Halfdrunkpadre 3 ай бұрын
It helps if your parents are rich and connected
@DannoHung
@DannoHung 3 ай бұрын
It takes someone who really hates capitalism to be a good capitalist.
@patwailes5927
@patwailes5927 3 ай бұрын
I love the contrast of Sam in this interview talking about his incredibly straightforward and conservative business practices vs being the twisted agent of chaos and existential horror he is on game changer
@BlackCanary87
@BlackCanary87 3 ай бұрын
This season may have made folks a bit paranoid 😂 They're going to have to rein it back next season.
@031Productions
@031Productions 3 ай бұрын
Look, you gotta release the demons somewhere.
@woodside4life
@woodside4life 3 ай бұрын
That’s common with people from… Where is he from again?
@jonathansendker7871
@jonathansendker7871 3 ай бұрын
pppppppp
@admugo
@admugo 3 ай бұрын
The Bingo-ception one was triggered so many trust issues, it was amazing to watch 😂😂
@HelloHuman1
@HelloHuman1 3 ай бұрын
I hope they do a big event for Sam’s 20 years at CollegeHumor.
@CassReidIsSomeone
@CassReidIsSomeone 3 ай бұрын
They lock HIM in the studio and he has to escape
@bertoandon9681
@bertoandon9681 3 ай бұрын
@@CassReidIsSomeone Why should he have to? He's been there the whole time!
@Smajtastic
@Smajtastic 3 ай бұрын
Yes, but it's Dropout now :)
@LogCabinMusic
@LogCabinMusic 3 ай бұрын
every cast member gets to face him in gladiatorial combat
@angusholmes5523
@angusholmes5523 3 ай бұрын
Brennan hosts an episode of Game Changer where the other players hunt down Sam
@S1lentBob
@S1lentBob 3 ай бұрын
Literally the one subscription I don't feel bad about paying for on my limited student budget.
@jadeyu7197
@jadeyu7197 3 ай бұрын
💯💯💯
@jeffw991
@jeffw991 3 ай бұрын
Best value in streaming.
@justingoldsmith1852
@justingoldsmith1852 3 ай бұрын
I got it for d20. And planned to cancel after fh junior year. But the 1/3 of game changer I watch apple is worth it. Now random passion/fun projects popping up just makes it impossible to cancel.
@DoubtlessCar0
@DoubtlessCar0 3 ай бұрын
Honestly, I’ve been watching Dropout stuff consistently since subscribing…basically I’ve been going through the back log of Dimension 20, watching all the small shows, and Game changers and it’s so much quality content!! The only app I use more than Dropout is KZbin…
@Chevycamaroman317
@Chevycamaroman317 3 ай бұрын
@@justingoldsmith1852there’s so many great shows! Gamechanger is amazing, the new smarty pants shows funny af too
@reynaldkurniawan9424
@reynaldkurniawan9424 3 ай бұрын
For those of you who doesn't watch Game Changer and a little confused about Sam's "You are trapped in here", that green room actually doubles as an escape room, and Brennan Lee Mulligan was one of the contestants who got trapped in there
@BlackCanary87
@BlackCanary87 3 ай бұрын
I always assumed they took down the dummy wall with the secret chamber after but hey, maybe not!
@Rewkers
@Rewkers 3 ай бұрын
@@BlackCanary87 I don't think that's a dummy wall, I think they just somehow added a secret chamber lol
@KaristinaLafae
@KaristinaLafae 3 ай бұрын
Escape the Green Room definitely inspired some trust issues among cast members. 😂😂
@destinycox458
@destinycox458 3 ай бұрын
@@KaristinaLafae 100 percent. if i remember right ally has said whenever they are on another show on dropout they do wonder if its a secret game changer ep.
@andalilbitqueer
@andalilbitqueer 3 ай бұрын
​@@Rewkers nah, it's been there the whole time. 😶‍🌫️
@myyaoibetch
@myyaoibetch 3 ай бұрын
Being profitable on a $5-6/month subscription model really shows how they're making every dollar count. I'm always amazed at the quality and attention to detail in the current Dropout shows. Also, Sam Reich is so cool. He could have been a "boss in an office." However, he's not only an active, hilarious host of Game Changer, but also uses shows to showcase how amazing everyone ELSE is.
@orionweiss5418
@orionweiss5418 3 ай бұрын
I'd say he's not only a host, he is the best host they have. They have so many absolute characters and he let's them shine in all of their madness and glory on Game Changer and make some noise
@ecenbt
@ecenbt 2 ай бұрын
I think this also shows us to what extent other streaming companies are money and profit-oriented and how they truly don't care about talent, creative or audience satisfaction
@R-SXX
@R-SXX 20 күн бұрын
He is the Michael Scott of our time
@Fhoulghoul
@Fhoulghoul 3 ай бұрын
Dropout is one of the most enjoyable and loyalty-inspiring companies I support. I will give up every streaming service before Dropout. That plucky group of weirdos will have my money until the end of time
@jadeyu7197
@jadeyu7197 3 ай бұрын
100%
@eddiemate
@eddiemate 3 ай бұрын
It helps that Dropout respects the money of the audience. They're like $9/month here in Australia, which is still below half of every other service. And I don't pay even that because I was grandfathered in on the older price point.
@reynastrange2828
@reynastrange2828 3 ай бұрын
Dropout has the highest quality content for the least amount of money of any streaming service in existence
@031Productions
@031Productions 3 ай бұрын
100% the same. I've been subscribed for like 4 years now and would never drop it. I often give out gift months to friends who I know would love D20, and I've occasionally given free gift months as thank you's to members of my community. Every one of them has stayed on as an active subscriber because it's just that good.
@benjamingeiger
@benjamingeiger 3 ай бұрын
It's Dropout, then Nebula, then everything else.
@LadonMach
@LadonMach 3 ай бұрын
“So, you just… treat your employees well and try to create content you think people will enjoy seeing? And you’re successful?” “Well, I’m not gonna really come out and say it or anything but also I’m very good at my job and that helps with the whole success thing.”
@Phyrre56
@Phyrre56 3 ай бұрын
Dropout is producing unique content. That's the root of the success. No one else is focusing on improvised comedy with high production values aimed at well-educated folks. When you have a unique offering that people want to buy, you can afford to uphold your morals without going out of business. College Humor was not unique content. It was scripted, low budget KZbin sketches which are a dime a dozen. You can build a following with that but not much of a loyal fanbase that wants to pay out of pocket for what you're selling.
@sawdustanddiamonds99
@sawdustanddiamonds99 3 ай бұрын
yeah i would even go as far as to say that a lot of their scripted comedy sketches still pale in comparison to their unscripted content personally
@idiotindustries
@idiotindustries 3 ай бұрын
@@Phyrre56 not to mention more adult-side game shows. stuff like um actually and dirty laundry isn't really provided anywhere else.
@MrMMochizuki
@MrMMochizuki 3 ай бұрын
@@sawdustanddiamonds99 They really hit the sweet spot of balance between scripted and unscripted. They are all essentially writers and creatives who are putting an incredible amount of preparation into everything, but the execution feels incredibly organic because the interactions are unscripted.
@ivanbrezakbrkan
@ivanbrezakbrkan 3 ай бұрын
Doing the interview in THE escape room? I didn’t know I needed this business lesson from you FC, but you did reich by us!
@SweetPeaPD
@SweetPeaPD 3 ай бұрын
Well the escape room is the green room, which holds the talent until they’re onstage, it was such a genius idea to have the figurative holding room as a literal holding room they have to escape from
@eurojack44
@eurojack44 3 ай бұрын
I 100% watch/rewatch Dropout content when I am having a bad day. You can absolutely feel the respect and creative synergy they have in the content they produce.
@kimhaz6082
@kimhaz6082 3 ай бұрын
Same ❤
@mu4784
@mu4784 3 ай бұрын
It is so healing for me as well 🌸
@jonnnnniej
@jonnnnniej 3 ай бұрын
I heard someone describe it as "chicken soup content" because of that feeling when you are sick and your mother makes you chicken soup and it warms you physically and mentally :)
@eric_the_egggremlin
@eric_the_egggremlin 3 ай бұрын
I mean, this is Robert Reich's kid we're talking about. He probably grew up hearing his parents discuss how businesses screw over their employees (and customers) in the name of growth. Sam is also just a genuinely good man, though
@TitaniaBird
@TitaniaBird 3 ай бұрын
He is the child of a rare breed of hippie-gone-respectable: hippies who never sacrificed their values for respectability. In a world where so many children of the '60s and '70s turned into what they hated, Sam's mom and dad remain true to themselves even in an age where vice became virtue.
@lawofsirfignewton7881
@lawofsirfignewton7881 3 ай бұрын
True. You ever wonder where Sam grew up?
@zac2517
@zac2517 3 ай бұрын
@@lawofsirfignewton7881I wonder if there was a theater
@roxlinm
@roxlinm 3 ай бұрын
@@lawofsirfignewton7881he’s been here the entire time.
@jojamison2062
@jojamison2062 3 ай бұрын
I never knew he was Robert Reich’s kid!?!?!!
@redred7702
@redred7702 3 ай бұрын
All Sam had to do was care and respect his staff, and that care alone probably brought in more people than imaginable. A little kindness goes more than a long way.
@ovencake523
@ovencake523 3 ай бұрын
kindness, and lots of blood sweat and tears and hard work
@Swenglish
@Swenglish 3 ай бұрын
@@ovencake523 Kindness and a common goal with shared benefits makes people want to put in the work, in a way that being leeched off of by a greedy and lazy boss doesn't.
@0.-.0
@0.-.0 3 ай бұрын
Vile, greedy CEOs care about and respect their staff all the time. It actually takes a lot more than just nice words and basic respect to make sure that your employees are well paid, with good benefits, a strong work culture of acceptance, and enough people are hired for all the different jobs that no one has to work 80 hour weeks.
@Swenglish
@Swenglish 3 ай бұрын
@@0.-.0 There's a difference between nice and kind, and respect is a relative concept.
@helenm1085
@helenm1085 3 ай бұрын
And he had to be rich enough to buy the company and not have shareholders
@jaws8154
@jaws8154 3 ай бұрын
thank you for localized affordable subscription prices!!
@meow-px6kk
@meow-px6kk 3 ай бұрын
Yes and thank you for KZbin subscription! I don't have any of the fancy online payment methods, so every three months I go to the grocery store and get a 15€ Google Play card to watch the good stuff. Without KZbin membership I couldn't do that, so thank you Dropout!
@landler656
@landler656 3 ай бұрын
IDK if you saw that Hank Green video about it but Dropout also covers the price difference between iTunes, and Spotify vs. direct subscriptions out of their own pocket. That way everyone pays the same price, even if they make less from the transaction.
@jaws8154
@jaws8154 3 ай бұрын
@@landler656 yess!!
@ranaosman1393
@ranaosman1393 3 ай бұрын
​@landler656 how does that work exactly? Do you have the link?
@landler656
@landler656 3 ай бұрын
@@ranaosman1393 I don't know if I can post a link but it's on Hank's Channel, 3rd or 4th most recent vid; the title is "STOP Subscribing to Things on your Phone!!!!" It's at about the 7 minute mark. The gist of it is that because Google and Apple are corporations, they take roughly 30% of the profit when bought through the Play/Apple Store. Dropout, not wanting to pass that scumminess on to us fans, just accepts that they get less to keep the price the same. Also, the alternative is to buy your subscription from their website and then use whatever app with that sign in info.
@IceMetalPunk
@IceMetalPunk 3 ай бұрын
I'm living paycheck to paycheck, constantly worried that if I have another sudden expense, I won't be able to afford food... but I don't regret paying monthly for my Dropout membership. They consistently deliver quality content time and time again, and they do it with such class and respect for the audience, the cast and crew, and really just everyone in general. Sam does seem like the most genuinely kind boss, and the fact that he doesn't see it that way -- that he sees it as "we're just doing the bare minimum of decency" -- just proves how good of a person he is. It IS the bare minimum of decency... but there's a huge dearth of that these days, especially when money is involved. For him to maintain those values, not just in his words but in his actions, while also running a business which capitalism forces to prioritize profits? Beyond commendable. Unless he has a sudden heel turn and royally fucks up, I will always support Sam and Dropout and everyone on it.
@shr9662
@shr9662 3 ай бұрын
Didn’t you heart about dropout America? He’s turning it hard right wing
@IceMetalPunk
@IceMetalPunk 3 ай бұрын
@@shr9662 I think he might have a stroke if he has to deal with that from his own employees *and* the comments sections 😂
@jadeyu7197
@jadeyu7197 3 ай бұрын
@@IceMetalPunk I mean, have you asked where is he from?
@anonanon9380
@anonanon9380 3 ай бұрын
To clarify, running a business doesn’t force him to prioritise profits, but this is only because Dropout is run as a private company (like he was saying in the interview). The mechanism which forces companies to focus on endless unsustainable short-term growth is obligations to shareholders, and he’s specifically avoided that at significant personal cost. He’s good people, is what I’m saying.
@IceMetalPunk
@IceMetalPunk 3 ай бұрын
@@anonanon9380 Well, I mean... no. If you run a business and you don't prioritize profits, then you can't grow your business. If you don't grow the business, people start to find it stale and stop paying at which point, now you're no longer making enough money to maintain operations anymore, and your business has to shut down. It ultimately comes down to your customers' utility curves vs your operational expenses.
@TheFiddleFaddle
@TheFiddleFaddle 3 ай бұрын
I love Dropout so much. I'm in a transitional stage where I'm cutting so many of my streaming subscriptions. Dropout I will never abandon.
@NoThankUBeQuiet
@NoThankUBeQuiet 3 ай бұрын
I've had to abandon it at times for financial reasons but I always do my best to bring it back asap
@xswiftblade
@xswiftblade 3 ай бұрын
Sam took College Humor from a random failing media company and turned it into the gold standard of a decent workplace and incredible output. So grateful for everything he and the dropout family do.
@astroemi
@astroemi 3 ай бұрын
I don’t think CollegeHumor was any random failing media company. And I’m sure Sam wouldn’t agree with that either, which is why he stuck with it for so many years. He definitely did something way better with it, but I think this all starts because CH was already a fun workplace where people were friends with each other.
@hannahysabelle
@hannahysabelle 3 ай бұрын
It’s so weird to see Sam in something other than his train conductor-esque pinstripe suit
@apaleslimghost
@apaleslimghost 3 ай бұрын
"we have a, uh... product" *cut to Izzy twerking upside down*
@nicolasmcguire7883
@nicolasmcguire7883 3 ай бұрын
based on Sam's dad, it makes a ton of sense that he would hold loyalty to his staff and fostering creativity as important. It's admirable and I appreciate him more and more.
@BlackCanary87
@BlackCanary87 3 ай бұрын
I know who his dad is, but where is he from?
@boopsnoot3142
@boopsnoot3142 3 ай бұрын
@@BlackCanary87 He's from Cambridge, MA. I hear the Crumbly Square Theater has fragrant popcorn.
@cyclopsboi
@cyclopsboi 3 ай бұрын
not only is the content wonderful but dropout also does revenue sharing with the cast and crew so that everyone is invested in making the site as good as it can be
@ezrenficker4502
@ezrenficker4502 3 ай бұрын
I wonder how the old parent company feels now seeing Dimension 20 sell out Madison Square Garden and all the rest of Dropout's success. So glad Sam was able to get Dropout to flourish into it's full potential
@chemicalhap
@chemicalhap 3 ай бұрын
Yeah well IAC...is pretty much a horrible place tonwork...and has failed most of its properties...so I don't even think they even recognize what success is ...in any form
@mydogsareneat
@mydogsareneat 3 ай бұрын
Most impressive glow up of the pandemic was drop out
@tee-py3zx
@tee-py3zx 3 ай бұрын
I love the content that Dropout makes, but part of why I love the company is how they treat their employees. Everytime I see someone (even just a random crew member) mention their experiences working with Dropout, they always say how uniquely positive it was and how valued they felt. They did profit sharing in 2023 for every single person that has worked with the company that year. They are working on paying residuals for every single person. I've heard Sam downplay this by calling it a good business strategy -creating a reputation of being a great place to work attracts good employees that want to keep working with you forever.. but also, it just feels good to support a business that I know is made of good people who are valued for their work... One of the few times my money is going directly to the people who made the product that I love.
@Romanticoutlaw
@Romanticoutlaw 3 ай бұрын
turns out when you treat your talent with humanity and respect, they can make magic happen. And when you genuinely care about your boss, and you can see them putting in the work alongside you, and you're invested (emotionally) in the future of your company because of it, you find you can and will move mountains to keep that dream alive. Big ups to sam for making all this possible.
@lmac40762
@lmac40762 3 ай бұрын
It's really refreshing to see a company that doesn't seem to be run like a pump and dump scheme.
@chaser952
@chaser952 3 ай бұрын
Very Important People sucked me in as a subscriber. Can’t wait to explore the rest of the content on Dropout!
@annawest2869
@annawest2869 3 ай бұрын
Denzel is the greatest advertising they ever did
@definitelynotasiren
@definitelynotasiren 3 ай бұрын
Welcome to the family!
@MopWater777
@MopWater777 3 ай бұрын
Keep us updated on your exploits and let us know what your other faves are
@kieran.grant_
@kieran.grant_ Ай бұрын
Can I get a little clap?
@niccolom
@niccolom 3 ай бұрын
I stopped watching College Humor about 15 years ago after following them for every video for about 5 years. I still remember this guy's face and that's why I clicked in here.
@brewdaly1873
@brewdaly1873 3 ай бұрын
Oh, you should definitely check out Dropout. They do have a pretty decent amount available for free on KZbin. I remember watching the old College Humor skits too, but Dropout is a whole different monster and easily the best subscription I have.
@patiencekillz
@patiencekillz 3 ай бұрын
you have to check out their newer stuff, it’s great
@frcShoryuken
@frcShoryuken 3 ай бұрын
Try to find some Game Changer or Make Some Noise clips. Breaking News is also super good
@FiddlerKeith
@FiddlerKeith 3 ай бұрын
Look up "True Facts About Grant Anthony OBrien". You laugh you subscribe
@secretforreddit
@secretforreddit 3 ай бұрын
@@frcShoryuken Breaking News always feels like old school CH, it's great. I think my current favorite show they're doing is Very Important People, though!
@denalinorsen6180
@denalinorsen6180 3 ай бұрын
the great thing about smaller private companies and co-ops that aren't focused on continuous growth is that they are far better at surviving recessions and dont need to lay off people in hard times.
@JackgarPrime
@JackgarPrime 2 ай бұрын
That's a great point. If you keep things focused on what you know will work and not try to outgrow yourself, it makes you more resistant to massive, unpredictable disruptions or huge market shifts.
@RGGG318
@RGGG318 3 ай бұрын
One of the few companies still championing air safety and Covid precautions!
@KaristinaLafae
@KaristinaLafae 3 ай бұрын
Amen! As an immuncompromised person, it's refreshing to see that Dropout is still, in 2024, protecting all of its employees in the workplace with masking and COVID testing before tapings.
@punkitt
@punkitt 3 ай бұрын
Thank God, honestly. As someone who's been looking at the film industry it's super refreshing to see that they're still taking safety seriously in the face of an entire industry not bothering anymore. Considering how often Grant getting Covid came up in the latest season, those policies probably saved a lot of staff and talent from getting sick
@WaxierWarrior
@WaxierWarrior 3 ай бұрын
‘How big is too big’ no sir your confused thats not Grant ‘50’ O’Brien
@ethanhorn6093
@ethanhorn6093 3 ай бұрын
I got a day one sub and never looked back. When IAC dropped Dropout I swear to God, I am not the kind of person who does the whole parasocial relationship thing... but I was like "oh no". I probably solo'd getting at least thirty extra subscriptions from people. I never have been more immediately affected by a company being under threat of closing more than with CH and I just kept thinking about this sketch that Mike Trapp wrote like in the 2010s which was a play on Home Alone and Sam plays the Mom and who freaks out when she realizes her son is left behind... and... Sam runs up to the flight attendant and is like "Please I left my writers behind... they're so stupid!" or something to that effect... and I've loved CH/Dropout ever since that first time I saw that video. I still occasionally recruit subscriptions for the sheer love of the game. I want this company to live forever and I am way too invested in it to stop now. Oh by the way I also try and comment/like/share on every video Sam is on to boost up Dropout exposure. Am I but a grain of sand blowing in the breeze? Probably. But it DOESN'T COST ME NOTHIN' TO DO IT SO I AM GOING TO KEEP DOING UNTIL I DROP.
@remytherat
@remytherat 3 ай бұрын
somehow brennan’s anti capitalism messages even make it way into this video that’s so real sam said “i have one job to do and it’s make sure brennan continues spreading his agenda”
@JackgarPrime
@JackgarPrime 2 ай бұрын
And this is how Market Socialism will take over the world.
@lx-icon
@lx-icon 3 ай бұрын
Great interview - but I would have loved to learn where Sam is from, it's a shame you didn't ask him that question!
@chloeeffron4361
@chloeeffron4361 3 ай бұрын
crumbly square
@cassiopeia9187
@cassiopeia9187 3 ай бұрын
Transylvania
@cassiopeia9187
@cassiopeia9187 3 ай бұрын
Transylvania
@esotericpince
@esotericpince 3 ай бұрын
shame we'll never know
@UpTheDown7
@UpTheDown7 Күн бұрын
Money. He comes from a lot of money.
@mjredder
@mjredder 3 ай бұрын
Best $6 a month you'll ever spend.
@Zieg_Games
@Zieg_Games 3 ай бұрын
Disagree, too much California Leftist nonsense. That being said, I am glad that this small business is working with this model.
@mandalore1089
@mandalore1089 2 ай бұрын
@@Zieg_Games Grow up.
@Zieg_Games
@Zieg_Games 2 ай бұрын
@@mandalore1089 Suck less. Commies never win.
@caitthew8223
@caitthew8223 3 ай бұрын
what got me to subscribe to dropout (as a broke uni student who still lives with her mother and doesn't work) is a combination of love for the content and also so much respect for how they run. they prove that you can turn a profit while being respectful, progressive and ethical!!! just hearing that dropout was given a pass for the writers/actors strike due to their incredible conditions was like "oh my god. they're that good." and they STILL participated in the movement and supported the strikes! and sam saying it is just decent is so wonderful because truthfully it is just decent but he is paving the way with these ethics. we're so used to needing to sacrifice something in the triangle of quality, ethical, profitable, but sam and dropout show that no, you can do all three. i respect that man so much.
@sidhackney8831
@sidhackney8831 3 ай бұрын
My roommate and I each have our own separate Dropout subscriptions because we want to give them money. It's the only streaming service I still pay for.
@solutanbrun
@solutanbrun 3 ай бұрын
I would probably pay in order to have Sam Reich as my boss. No joke.
@tombpunk
@tombpunk 3 ай бұрын
I’m glad there is a streaming service that are anticapitalist and wholesome towards its workers.
@Zieg_Games
@Zieg_Games 3 ай бұрын
Anticapitalist organizations cannot exist without capitalism.
@sushiluv-nr1dv
@sushiluv-nr1dv 3 ай бұрын
@@Zieg_Games duh... it's in the word... anti-capitalism. of course they wouldn't exist without capitalism. that doesn't make capitalism good lmfaooooo. dropout is a diamond in the rough.
@Zieg_Games
@Zieg_Games 3 ай бұрын
@@sushiluv-nr1dv Latte communists are just the worst. Complaining about a system that you massively benefit from is hypocrisy. At least Stalin was robbing banks for the cause.
@nothingworks1881
@nothingworks1881 3 ай бұрын
​@@Zieg_Gameshmmmmm. You say you're anti-capitalist, but yet you live in America, curious
@Zieg_Games
@Zieg_Games 3 ай бұрын
@@nothingworks1881 You latte communists are insufferable sipping overpriced coffee, while bitching on your iPhones. Stalin was a mass murderer and awful statesman, but the man was robbing banks for the cause. You goddamn whiners.
@elmomertens
@elmomertens 3 ай бұрын
7:50 I was dreaming of D20 video game for a while - BG3 style video game set in Spyre or something
@SeanBoyce-gp
@SeanBoyce-gp 3 ай бұрын
I was thinking Dimension 20 Smash Bros. style. But you can also pretty easily imagine a game in literally any of the settings.
@Nex_Addo
@Nex_Addo 3 ай бұрын
Dropout: "Live we're not looking at, AT ALL" Also Dropout: We just sold out MSG in like...6 hours? I know what he means of course, that that's not a core driver of revenue. But I think it alludes to the wisdom of self deprecation and conservative forcasting that both of these things can be true, and therefore they'll never have the bottom drop from under them if a big event under performs. And of course it means, apart from monopolies jacking up the prices on their own, they can generally keep prices low for their audience; which is mostly Millenials and Gen Z, who have the spending power that they have.
@crucicarose4343
@crucicarose4343 3 ай бұрын
If it interests you, in a Vogue interview with BLeeM, he does mentioned that it was a surprise for them how fast MSG sold, and thus, it's on their minds now that there is market for live show tours in America.
@Nex_Addo
@Nex_Addo 3 ай бұрын
@@crucicarose4343 Dammit, after a stupid reddit meme I can no longer read BLeeM anything but phonetically. I've actually read that article, and would be curious to know if MSG changed anything compared to what Sam Says here. My guess is they'll just have higher expectations for what they can accomplish for cast exposure in the future, rather then change the ultimate goal of the events.
@yue1084
@yue1084 3 ай бұрын
​@tylerk3130 they'll probably wait after msg to evaluate the cost-benefit and logistical burden of such events, as well as how the talent feels about such long-term and high-scale arrangements
@mfmageiwatch
@mfmageiwatch 3 ай бұрын
He said he is not looking at Live as a PROFIT stream at all. Not that they won't do further live things.
@yue1084
@yue1084 3 ай бұрын
@@mfmageiwatch OP literally said that in their comment; they're trying to say that MSG proves it could be a revenue stream on top of being a marketing move
@brendanregs
@brendanregs 3 ай бұрын
Sam Reich is running his business the exact opposite way of every shitty tech CEO and it is SO refreshing!
@MatthewBreck
@MatthewBreck 3 ай бұрын
capitalism is the final boss.
@sofialaya596
@sofialaya596 3 ай бұрын
This is an example of what a company should be
@babebam
@babebam 2 ай бұрын
Sam Reich and Dropout are legends. Dropout is the ONLY subscription I've never regretted. It got my husband and I through the pandemic.
@SageLegacy
@SageLegacy 3 ай бұрын
Crazy how some companies don't need infinite growth from random rich investors. If only there were more companies like dropout for sure
@dustinswafford9232
@dustinswafford9232 3 ай бұрын
I'd cancel Netflix, Hulu, Amazon Prime, and Disney+ before I'd cancel my Dropout subscription. Game Changer, Um Actually, and Make Some Noise are my comfort shows and I watch them on loop in the background while I'm working.
@WeLoveSandwich
@WeLoveSandwich 3 ай бұрын
This is great stuff. Sam is such a well spoken dude. I do wish they would invest more in the UI, but that's the only gripe I have.
@ryry0913
@ryry0913 3 ай бұрын
We adore Sam! Not only is he a great business person but a great person. He made a company with integrity that is focused on respecting its employees and it's comsumers without pandering and without trying to make content simply for content sake.
@KaristinaLafae
@KaristinaLafae 3 ай бұрын
My husband and I have watched Dropout for approximately 99% of our TV viewing time since we learned about it from my brother at the beginning of the year. It feels good to watch Dropout because there's hardly anything that makes you want to cringe for it being toxic, the way a lot of comedy is elsewhere, and it's a satisfying escape from the horrors of the world we live in. And you know that the performers are all valued because the consent culture is not just behind the scenes, but also on screen. I'd rather support companies like Dropout than any other streaming service that makes decisions that hurt creators and fans just to improve their bottom line.a If more companies in other sectors were to follow the same business ethos as Dropout - with pricing that respects how consumers are struggling in this economy - the public is ready to embrace them and shun the toxic megacorporations we're forced to do business with due to lack of competition.
@xxgn
@xxgn 2 ай бұрын
I'd suggest that Total Forgiveness is rather toxic, though there's probably something amazing there. Alas, I refuse to watch it.
@KaristinaLafae
@KaristinaLafae 2 ай бұрын
@@xxgn That's something they address in the show itself after a notable change from "friendly competition" to "this could be the end of our friendship." Grant and Ally had to convince Sam to make the show, but neither of them realized how bad it would get. Sam even begged both of them at various points not to take the week's challenges because they weren't worth it. To them, though, it was worth it. They consented to every episode even when they shouldn't. It ends the only way it could, and they'll never make another show like it because it went so terribly wrong. It now exists as a dark commentary on the reality of student loan debt and the lengths people will go to try to free themselves of it.
@whiteskull1067
@whiteskull1067 2 ай бұрын
Well put 💯
@montelds
@montelds 3 ай бұрын
It's such a delight to hear from Sam. Just a lovely human and honest man.
@Hallam910
@Hallam910 3 ай бұрын
One could say he's The Perfect American
@judgemental9253
@judgemental9253 2 ай бұрын
I remember when ‘if google was a guy’ came out, CH was revolutionary to early KZbin, and it’s insane how they’ve managed to do it again
@kevinr7216
@kevinr7216 3 ай бұрын
Dropout is, nojoke, *the only thing me and my gf watch ever always*
@Artofcarissa
@Artofcarissa 3 ай бұрын
It’s honestly crazy how college humor went from a website that produced notoriously sexist and racist videos and articles to a progressively run company that makes just plain fun and interesting videos
@SuperHipsterGamer
@SuperHipsterGamer 3 ай бұрын
It's not. They were always left-leaning. Times just changed and people grew beyond the cultural zeitgeist of considering those things harmless.
@Artofcarissa
@Artofcarissa 3 ай бұрын
@@SuperHipsterGamer they were left leaning from like 2015 onward, but their early 2000’s-late 2000’s stuff was hella sexist
@SuperHipsterGamer
@SuperHipsterGamer 3 ай бұрын
@@Artofcarissa Yes because almost everyone was sexist in the late 2000's, and before that even the most revolutionary leftists were holding sexist beliefs. Left-leaning isn't a dogmatic signifier where throughout all time you had to check certain boxes, it can only be understood in its given cultural and historic context.
@Artofcarissa
@Artofcarissa 3 ай бұрын
@@SuperHipsterGamer okay so then you agree with me then, see that wasn’t too hard. Idk why you had to qualify it with like a bunch of different reasons. Society was sexist and homophobic back then, so it wasn’t surprising they made questionable videos.
@SuperHipsterGamer
@SuperHipsterGamer 3 ай бұрын
@@Artofcarissa No I don't agree with your statement that Collegehumor weren't progressive at their time. Because progressiveness hadn't grown beyond using sexism as humor in the 00's
@Imperial_Squid
@Imperial_Squid 3 ай бұрын
Glad to hear you sit down and talk to Sam, it's good to hear the thoughts of a True American who doesn't listen to all that leftie liberal woke drama kids nonsense you see online
@he.said.teenjiejer
@he.said.teenjiejer 3 ай бұрын
dropout america is my FAVORITE streaming service
@hada__02
@hada__02 3 ай бұрын
Wow, what a monster
@cassiopeia9187
@cassiopeia9187 3 ай бұрын
Sam really is the Perfect American
@Honer_300
@Honer_300 3 ай бұрын
Did you at all hear what he said about the politics of the company (especially brennan)?
@GameyRaccoon
@GameyRaccoon 3 ай бұрын
​@@Honer_300reference, silly
@voltcorp
@voltcorp 3 ай бұрын
brennan might be the devout anti-capitalist, but sam calling exponential growth a "meta sport" was an amazingly surgical dunk on the whole economy, and on a finance podcast of all places.
@MykalNines
@MykalNines 3 ай бұрын
Discovered Dropout recently and have been making my way through the Game Changer playlists. Worth the entire small subscription fee, and ive only seen that one show!
@tinkerer3399
@tinkerer3399 3 ай бұрын
I definitely recommend checking out some of the older shows from right before they went independent. Gods of Food and WTF101 in particular I found to be some of the best content they have ever made but you gotta dig down a bit to find them as they aren't current shows.
@kieran.grant_
@kieran.grant_ Ай бұрын
Honestly, gamechanger is the only reason I've stayed subscribed over the years. "Make some noise" is a spinoff that focuses on the same shtick as those improv episodes with Brennan Mike and Zac, which is fun. Dirty laundry is good for an episode here or there, but my recent favorite is Smartypants. Well worth looking into
@CaptainUrielVentris7
@CaptainUrielVentris7 3 ай бұрын
It's an organisation of funny people which really seems consciously but almost effortlessly decent and responsible.
@CrispyGFX
@CrispyGFX 2 ай бұрын
Dropout is the only subscription service I would ever consider paying for and it's not even close. I love EVERY show that they run. EVERY cast member is hilarious and charming and incredibly smart. I think Brennan Lee Mulligan said it best about Sam: "You've made a home where my favorite people get to show the world how brilliant and amazing they are". It shows in every single video with how happy and excited the cast always are. It's truly lightning in a bottle.
@thematman92
@thematman92 23 сағат бұрын
Unless you lock him in the greenroom then he gets upset.
@evelynlamoy8483
@evelynlamoy8483 3 ай бұрын
ah growth for growths sake, when business becomes a tumor.
@doremicoffee
@doremicoffee 3 ай бұрын
Truly thank you Sam for not giving up and making CollegeHumor/Dropout work.
@BucklingSwashes
@BucklingSwashes 3 ай бұрын
5:47 I love this conversation about growth. A lot of companies, especially in tech, are driven by this impossible concept of infinite, ever-increasing profits year-over-year, which often results in cost cutting and layoffs for the sake of artificially increasing profits. It's a short-sighted play that arguably results in you crippling your company. Real growth - that makes your company strong in the long term - is investing in your people and giving them the tools to keep producing.
@JohnstersInc
@JohnstersInc 3 ай бұрын
This shows me more and more that the current form of dropout is this generation’s Whose Line. A hyper-talented, diverse, relatively lower budget cast on rotation to guarantee a good time every time. They do things that make people think they could do that, whilst subtly demonstrating why they are the best in their field. Not afraid to be silly, camp, self-deprecating and self-aware. Both have a cult following that should be higher but even if not, and even if the profit runs out, the artistic legacy should be secured forever
@timgehrsitz3267
@timgehrsitz3267 3 ай бұрын
Something I'll say is around 9:00 when sam says "hyper-premium content" my first thought was he was talking about Dropout rather than big streaming services. To me, premium no longer means "budget" or "effects" or whatever else; premium is about how much care is put into the show and how much enjoyment it brings me, and frankly dropout crushes every other streaming service. If I see Leonardo DiCaprio in a movie I don't know the movie is gonna be good. But if I see Zac Oyama or Jacob Wysocki or any of the other Dropout cast, I know what I'm watching IS gonna be good because their abilities dictate how something goes. That used to be true with Tina Fey, Amy Poehler, and Andy Samberg in their respective NBC shows, and we saw how successful those were, but those sorts of shows aren't really around anymore.
@BradenTesla
@BradenTesla 3 ай бұрын
very good interview.
@bonzupippinpaddleoxacoppil484
@bonzupippinpaddleoxacoppil484 3 ай бұрын
Sam really is the prefect American.
@theoddcopy
@theoddcopy 3 ай бұрын
Dropout would likely be the last subscription I got rid if I needed to start saving money.
@dackattac
@dackattac 3 ай бұрын
9:40 Sam: “We get the feedback a lot that folks feel like watching our content and the Dropout platform in general is a safe space” [footage of Sam handcuffed getting zapped by a cattle prod on Dropout]
@0.-.0
@0.-.0 3 ай бұрын
This! Like, even you're even 1% of a decent person your comedy will not offend anyone, anywhere, at any time. You have to consciously TRY to offend people. It's not hard to make a safe space!
@charliepie1212
@charliepie1212 3 ай бұрын
They need to keep 'em handcuffed to keep it a safespace. Gotta keep 'em in his place
@argokarrus2731
@argokarrus2731 2 ай бұрын
See that footage is a safe space for me
@RachelJade70
@RachelJade70 2 ай бұрын
@@argokarrus2731 Seeing a CEO get tortured? Proves to me how much of a safe space it is ☺☺
@jayp2416
@jayp2416 3 ай бұрын
This is why Dropout is one of the subscriptions I let ride even when I’m not watching as much.
@alexalbaugh6972
@alexalbaugh6972 3 ай бұрын
Dropout is the natural successor to Saturday Night Live. The level of comfort, intimacy, and the sheer amount of time you've all spent improving, learning eachother, and growing as people have made your relationship with comedy feel like joking with your friends. And as someone who seems to have grown and changed as a person alongside CollegeHumor/Dropout, not only are they shaping the internet in New ways, but they're restructuring comedy and business models at the same time? Comedy can't prosper in a corporate environment because it's about relatability.
@10base-teaparty97
@10base-teaparty97 3 ай бұрын
Sam's story with Dropout is like the platonic form of putting your money where your mouth is. Been a subscriber for a few years now, can't imagine ever cancelling. Something something Game Changer . . .
@evandavis7
@evandavis7 3 ай бұрын
9:09 - Dropout is living proof that "go woke go broke" is complete horseshit.
@evolution_ethos
@evolution_ethos 2 ай бұрын
You missed the most important question in this interview. We are all wondering, Where is Sam from?
@Dave-cg9li
@Dave-cg9li 3 ай бұрын
Dropout is the only streaming service I'm subscribed to, and it's 100% worth it, definitely recommend! Their comedians are incredibly talented 😄 But obviously, it's a very different streaming service so it may not be for everyone. The fact that the people in these game shows are professional comedians makes it much fun.
@JackgarPrime
@JackgarPrime 2 ай бұрын
I wasn't really someone who was a fan of CollegeHumor and never followed its content. But Dropout? I love the stuff these guys are making. The shift in focus and company culture that Sam and his team have done here feels so fresh and honest compared to so much of what's out there in the entertainment space. And really, I think I just tend to like the more improv-heavy focus that Dropout takes compared to the scripted sketch style of CollegeHumor. It's just funny people being funny when given strange situations, and that is enough. Also it seems the resistance to try and reach beyond their means is very smart in a case like this. Trying to make yourself too big too fast could just cause an implosion of the company.
@Bassylover
@Bassylover 3 ай бұрын
Dropout is the only company that I wished charged me more money, so I have to buy merch to show them how much I value them and their creativity. Its the main thing I watch now. I can't wait to see how it grows because I will always try to find a way to fit Dropout into my budget.
@OmgItsKavi
@OmgItsKavi 3 ай бұрын
i appreciate and respect sam so much! great interview! :)
@lukelyons4099
@lukelyons4099 3 ай бұрын
It’s the only subscription that I never get rid of nor do I regret having. If they raised the price to $10.99 or even $14.99, I still would subscribe. It’s great content made by even better people and they never punch down. It’s a beacon of light in the gross comedy landscape that has come from the pandemic.
@sacukel
@sacukel 3 ай бұрын
How on earth does this man run a streaming company and also do incredible shit like Game Changer?
@peteryang5056
@peteryang5056 3 ай бұрын
It comes down to what he said at the end of the video - he and every other executive at Dropout are as much creators themselves as businesspeople. Their shared backgrounds in both worlds means that the business folks understand the value of artistic creation rather than looking down their noses at it, AND the artists understand that what they do keeps the lights running.
@PersonalPariah
@PersonalPariah 3 ай бұрын
My Dropout subscription is one of the easier things to justify on my outgoings. Lots of content and variety for a very reasonable price, whilst supporting a good enterprise.
@puppiesgoesrawr
@puppiesgoesrawr 3 ай бұрын
Dropout is such a worth it subscription that I will happily pay every month. They treat their people right, and they make really awesome show. It really is that simple.
@CreativoErratico
@CreativoErratico 3 ай бұрын
It baffles and saddens me that in 2024 we still think companies treating employees as people is a disruptive idea.
@sindex
@sindex 3 ай бұрын
huh, Brennan Lee Mulligan has some anti-capitalist views? I'd never noticed. 😂
@benpebbles4111
@benpebbles4111 3 ай бұрын
I love how they interviewed Sam, with a slightly larger bald Sam.
@Kgrjbftiihgz
@Kgrjbftiihgz 3 ай бұрын
I'm so glad that we have Dropout and Dropout is proving that streaming can work. They're a company you can really be proud to support.
@kevjumbanigahigafan1
@kevjumbanigahigafan1 3 ай бұрын
I FUCKING LOVE DROP OUT AND EVERYONE INVOLVED IN IT. THEY ARE ALL SWEET REVOLUTIONARY PPL.
@cara-leo
@cara-leo 3 ай бұрын
Sam is such an inspiration, in both what he’s built and the way he’s universally respected and loved by the cast in Dropout. It just speaks to who is he not only as a business man but as a person.
@makingsenseofus
@makingsenseofus 3 ай бұрын
I hear “card games” and perk up immediately. Critical Role just had a card game release with Universus, which is a game system where the conceit is “who would win between characters from vastly different IPs”. When they announced CR, my first thought was “OK, this is sweet, can they also get D20”.
@FastCompany
@FastCompany 3 ай бұрын
For more on this, click the link below to read the full article and find this episode of the Most Innovative Companies podcast: www.fastcompany.com/91136741/dropout-rebrand-collegehumor-sam-reich
@dimitreze
@dimitreze 3 ай бұрын
c'mon, just put the whole video of the podcast conversation here!
@joshuachristensen1942
@joshuachristensen1942 3 ай бұрын
You’re gonna have to settle for the audio version! Lots more from Sam PLUS a little bit of my interviews with David Kerns and Brennan Lee Mulligan
@dimitreze
@dimitreze 3 ай бұрын
@@joshuachristensen1942 I listened to the whole thing already! It was great! thanks a bunch. I just wanted to watch it too
@jl789nz
@jl789nz 3 ай бұрын
Sam is such a great role model. I love what he and his team have created here. I’ve mainly subscribed for Game Changers, but also just to support a great bunch of people. I’d way rather give money to Drop out than Netflix/Disney/any of the other publicly traded money chasing gotta maximize profit machines.
@lobsterbisque333
@lobsterbisque333 3 ай бұрын
Dropout has humanity, and for a company that goes a long way
@philippemorin7634
@philippemorin7634 2 ай бұрын
Really enjoy this look behind the scenes
@kevinr7216
@kevinr7216 3 ай бұрын
Sam is truly one of my favorite human beings of all time
@toothpastehombre
@toothpastehombre 3 ай бұрын
I feel like I could watch an hour of history/behind the scenes. Good stuff
@adanactnomew7085
@adanactnomew7085 3 ай бұрын
I'm going to say I'm very surprised by their turn-around. I thought they were done when they tried to go to subscription, but they've really proven me wrong and I'm happy to see this company of talent continue to thrive.
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