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Episode: From DealBook: Alex Cooper on Building a Media Brand

From DealBook: Alex Cooper on Building a Media Brand

Author: The New York Times
Duration: 00:26:21

Episode Shownotes

The host of the “Call Her Daddy” podcast and founder of the Unwell Network discusses her interview with Vice President Kamala Harris ahead of the 2024 election, her podcast’s journey from chatting about sex advice to delving into more serious subjects and how the Unwell Network’s fan merchandise became a

eight-figure business.“I don’t care if people consider me a journalist or a podcaster, or just a girl that talks online every week.”This interview was with Andrew Ross Sorkin of The New York Times at the annual DealBook Summit and recorded live in front of an audience at Jazz at Lincoln Center. Read more about highlights from the day at https://www.nytimes.com/live/2024/12/04/business/dealbook-summit-newsUnlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

Summary

In this episode, Alex Cooper, creator of the 'Call Her Daddy' podcast, shares her journey from discussing intimate topics to interviewing significant figures like Vice President Kamala Harris. She highlights the evolution of her media brand, the importance of authenticity, and candid conversations in connecting with audiences. Cooper discusses the Unwell Network's growth and the need for media to adapt to the shifting trust dynamics among younger generations. The conversation emphasizes her role in empowering women and engaging with socio-political topics relevant to her audience.

Go to PodExtra AI's episode page (From DealBook: Alex Cooper on Building a Media Brand) to play and view complete AI-processed content: summary, mindmap, topics, takeaways, transcript, keywords and highlights.

Full Transcript

00:00:00 Speaker_00
Hey, it's Michael. I'm here to let you know that this weekend, we're bringing you something a little bit different from our colleagues here at The Toms. It's a conversation with Alex Cooper.

00:00:09 Speaker_00
If you don't know, she is the host of the hit podcast, Call Her Daddy. Recently, our friends over at the Dealbook Summit held a series of conversations between our colleague Andrew Ross Sorkin and a huge, varied, and prominent group of people.

00:00:25 Speaker_00
They do this every year, but this year's guests included former President Bill Clinton, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, the chair of the Federal Reserve Jerome Powell, and the tennis legend Serena Williams. It was a fascinating lineup.

00:00:40 Speaker_00
All the conversations were important, but here at The Daily, we were especially struck by Alex Cooper and her insights into media, culture, and how power really works in 2024. If you don't know a lot about Alex Cooper, here's a couple of key facts.

00:00:57 Speaker_00
A couple years ago, she landed a deal for her podcast worth $125 million, and Time magazine has called her, quote, arguably the most successful woman in podcasting. Rolling Stone, meanwhile, has dubbed her Gen Z's Barbara Walters.

00:01:18 Speaker_00
And right before the election, she quite memorably interviewed Vice President Kamala Harris on her podcast.

00:01:24 Speaker_00
Cooper sat down with Andrew Ross Sorkin to talk about her unlikely rise from hosting a pretty raunchy dating show to becoming what she is now, one of the biggest and most important voices in all of podcasting.

00:01:37 Speaker_00
So, if you want to listen to any of the other Dealbook conversations I just mentioned, you can listen on our NYT audio app, or you can search for Dealbook Summit wherever you listen. Okay, here's Andrew Ross Sorkin in conversation with Alex Cooper.

00:01:56 Speaker_01
I consider myself Alex Cooper. I don't care if people consider me a journalist or a podcaster or just a girl that talks online every week.

00:02:04 Speaker_01
I know what I'm doing is changing a lot of lives, and I know a lot of women specifically have been extremely impacted by the conversations I'm having.

00:02:12 Speaker_01
So if you want to put me in the box of a journalist who just interviewed the Vice President of the United States, sure, put me there.

00:02:19 Speaker_02
This is Andrew Ross Sorkin with the New York Times, and you're listening to interviews from our annual DealBook Summit Live event, recorded on December 4th in New York City. There we are. There you are.

00:02:33 Speaker_01
Oh my God, we're here.

00:02:35 Speaker_02
We're here.

00:02:35 Speaker_01
Kind of a different vibe.

00:02:37 Speaker_02
It's a little bit of a different vibe. Just a little. It's just a little bit of a different vibe.

00:02:41 Speaker_02
Alex Cooper is here, and the reason we wanted to have her here today is that the media world is really shifting under our feet, who the public trusts, how they gather and get their information, who people are sharing their information with.

00:02:54 Speaker_02
The direction of travel seems to be moving towards podcasts, and the reigning queen is Alex Cooper. She is the host of Call Her Daddy. Her podcast is the number one podcast for women on Spotify with millions of listeners per episode.

00:03:07 Speaker_02
It's an unbelievable thing. She recently inked a deal for $125 million with SiriusXM. She also launched her own media company called Trending and the Unwell Network. She's building an empire. So we want to

00:03:22 Speaker_02
Thank you for coming and welcome the head of the Daddy Gang.

00:03:26 Speaker_01
Oh my God, thank you for having me.

00:03:28 Speaker_02
Hello everyone. So there's a lot to talk about here in terms of what's going on. I want to try to understand all this. You know, I went back and re-listened to your first episode ever.

00:03:40 Speaker_01
Oh no.

00:03:42 Speaker_02
Which was about sexting.

00:03:44 Speaker_01
Oh, what?

00:03:44 Speaker_02
Yeah. And now you're being called the Gen Z Barbara Walters. Yeah. So I'm trying to understand if you could just help us how this happened to you. I don't want to say it happened to you because I think you did this.

00:03:57 Speaker_02
But when you started with the first episode, what you thought was going to happen?

00:04:02 Speaker_01
So I grew up and my father was a sports television producer so I was like in a television truck my whole life and I was like I want to be a director, I want to be a producer, I want to be in media in some capacity.

00:04:12 Speaker_01
I was making little short form movies my whole life and then I played division one soccer in college and so I had this obsession with working hard and creating films and content.

00:04:24 Speaker_01
And when I graduated, I got fired from my sales job, and it was the absolute best thing that ever happened to me. And I was like, what am I going to do? I'm on unemployment checks. And I decided, OK, there's clearly a huge hole in the market.

00:04:37 Speaker_01
There's Howard Stern, and then there's no one for women, where women can actually feel like, oh, that is what I talk about with my friends. when I'm behind closed doors.

00:04:45 Speaker_01
And we don't feel comfortable speaking about certain things in public because as women, we are at a disadvantage. Sorry, boys in the room, if you disagree, but it's the truth.

00:04:53 Speaker_01
So I started on episode one just talking about my life and my sexual experiences, yes, but also it progressed to talking about my relationships and my friendships. But yes, it was very sex heavy and I was proud of it.

00:05:07 Speaker_01
I know it was salacious and I know it was out there but I also am like a marketer at heart and I was like this is gonna get everyone talking and then eventually I shifted the narrative but I think it worked.

00:05:21 Speaker_02
When do you think you knew it worked?

00:05:23 Speaker_01
Oh, I knew it worked when we published episode one. When episode one went up, the virality of the first three episodes was lightning in a bottle.

00:05:32 Speaker_01
I worked with Dave Portnoy at Barstool Sports, and he was like, I've never seen something in my entire career. Because again, it was just filling a hole in the market, and that's half of the reason why I did it.

00:05:43 Speaker_02
You worked with Dave. I did. And Barstool. Yeah. How important, I mean, Barstool has become a force in the influence in this country. What did you learn when you were at Barstool?

00:05:57 Speaker_01
You can never speak your mind too often on social media. I think when you think it's a little too much, go even farther. I think Dave, as crazy as he seems maybe, he's really, really smart with what he's doing.

00:06:09 Speaker_01
He knows exactly the type of audience that he's garnered, and people hang on to every single word he's saying. And so I think working with someone like that just

00:06:18 Speaker_01
made me recognize that what I was doing, I could keep pushing it further and further, and there was kind of no limit.

00:06:24 Speaker_02
Did you ever worry, though, that, like, you had gone past the limit?

00:06:27 Speaker_01
Oh, every week. I was like, ooh, is that a little too much? And then I was like, upload. But it kept working.

00:06:33 Speaker_02
But that's a question that kept working. So I'm curious what you think of just what's happened in the culture. Because the culture has gotten more coarse. It's gotten more crude.

00:06:42 Speaker_02
People have been willing, maybe, and maybe the argument is that people have been willing to have conversations they weren't willing to have before. But there's also, it's changed the tenor of the kind of conversations that people have. Is that good?

00:06:56 Speaker_02
Is that bad? What are we supposed to think of all of this?

00:06:59 Speaker_01
I think it's good and bad. I think when you look at social media right now, there's a lot of people that you can say, oh my god, they shouldn't have a platform, whether they're spreading misinformation or it's

00:07:10 Speaker_01
racist or whatever it is where you're like, why the hell is that person giving a platform?

00:07:14 Speaker_01
But I also think then there's the other side with what I've done with Call Her Daddy is I am having conversations that have not been to the degree publicly talked about in a capacity in a positive manner, right?

00:07:26 Speaker_01
Like mental health, we all now know like mental health, mental, no, no, no. I'm sitting down with women who are talking about their lived experiences in such detail in moments where people are like, holy shit, I don't want to hear about this.

00:07:38 Speaker_01
This is, well, no, this is what's happening. in real life. So listen and understand what's going on. And I think it's, if anything, moved the conversation forward to, finally, we're having more authenticity. And it's not just this, like, perfect facade.

00:07:51 Speaker_02
But you pivoted away, dare I say, from the sexting stuff.

00:07:55 Speaker_01
Yeah.

00:07:55 Speaker_02
Right? Like, on purpose?

00:07:56 Speaker_01
No. I was like, I literally have nothing more to give. Like, I've said it all. I've given you all my tips. Now what else is there to do? It wasn't on purpose. I literally, like, I put it out all on the table. I was ready to move on.

00:08:10 Speaker_02
And then you became an interviewer. Yes. And one of the things I'm very curious about is you've done a lot of fascinating interviews, but you ask, I mean, I like to think that I ask some occasionally tough questions.

00:08:23 Speaker_02
You know, you ask like Gwyneth Paltrow, Brad Pitt, or Ben Affleck.

00:08:27 Speaker_01
Well, we all want to know.

00:08:33 Speaker_02
So what I thought was so interesting about this is Christina Aguilera, who you interviewed, said that, quote, you feel safe to her. Yeah. Do you feel safe? Do you think that when you interview people, you're a safe place?

00:08:46 Speaker_02
Because I've been listening to a lot of these episodes, and I'm not so sure.

00:08:50 Speaker_01
You don't feel safe? Do you feel safe right now with me? I don't know. Because you're the one in the position, yeah. No, listen, I think that a lot of people, everyone is always fascinated, like, how do you get this out of people?

00:09:02 Speaker_01
Like, why are they telling you things that they've never said in media after 20 years? I think it's because I was raised by a therapist, and my entire life, all I did was this. It was like, sit down, let's talk about your feelings.

00:09:14 Speaker_01
And I think that's very taboo for a lot of people. It's like, don't talk about how you feel. If anything, don't acknowledge it ever, and just keep it moving. And when I sit down with people, from the minute I open the door at my studio,

00:09:26 Speaker_01
I am so intentional about the way that I am speaking to someone. I am giving them all of my attention and I'm actually listening to what they're saying because I genuinely care, because I know the community that I have built cares.

00:09:41 Speaker_01
Every single thing I do is for my audience. I live and breathe it. My husband is always like, We are in a relationship together, plus a third, which is the daddy gang. All I do is for my audience.

00:09:52 Speaker_01
And so, yes, I think when a celebrity sits down, they're like, oh shit, you actually care. This is kind of refreshing. You're not like, all right, next question.

00:09:59 Speaker_02
But do you think of yourself as a journalist then in a way? Or do you think of yourself as an entertainer? Because the other reason I mention this is I think that there's this sort of interesting cross thing happening.

00:10:14 Speaker_02
And I don't know, to be honest, because I grew up as a traditional journalist, I can't tell if I think this is healthy or not.

00:10:19 Speaker_01
Yeah. I think it's so healthy, first of all. I consider myself Alex Cooper. I don't care if people consider me a journalist or a podcaster or just a girl that talks online every week.

00:10:32 Speaker_01
I know what I'm doing is changing a lot of lives, and I know a lot of women specifically have been extremely impacted by the conversations I'm having.

00:10:39 Speaker_01
So if you want to put me in the box of a journalist who just interviewed the Vice President of the United States, sure, put me there. But I'm fine with podcaster too.

00:10:47 Speaker_02
Okay, so let's talk about that. You did just interview the vice president ahead of this last election. You had tried to avoid politics.

00:10:57 Speaker_01
I did.

00:10:58 Speaker_02
Or at least you said you were trying to avoid politics. And then what happened? Did they reach out to you? Did you reach out to them?

00:11:04 Speaker_01
Yeah, they reached out. Both sides reached out.

00:11:07 Speaker_02
So Trump reached out too?

00:11:10 Speaker_01
We had a Zoom call with Trump's team.

00:11:12 Speaker_02
Tell us about that.

00:11:13 Speaker_01
I wasn't on it. I was like, let me know how that goes. I wasn't on it. But they reached out. And I think the interesting thought for me was, what I have built, I am the very competitive person.

00:11:31 Speaker_01
Back to my athlete nature days, I'm like, how do we keep ramping this shit up? And although I didn't want to technically get into politics, I did recognize there was a larger conversation that was directly impacting my audience, right?

00:11:46 Speaker_01
Joe Rogan has a conversation, he knows his audience. I know my audience. And it's a bunch of women looking for someone to advocate for them every single day. And I understand people are like, oh God, you're gonna focus the whole time on abortion?

00:11:58 Speaker_01
Yeah, I am. Because it's not about abortion, it's about women's right to their body. So I thought, Why not have on someone that could potentially have a huge impact on our country? And so I did it.

00:12:14 Speaker_02
And it was fun. I'm actually curious, what did you think of the interview itself?

00:12:18 Speaker_01
I thought it was fascinating. It was the fastest interview I've ever done in my life. I was like, oh my God, I have 50 minutes. It was like 45 to 50 minutes with the vice president. And I like to get comfortable.

00:12:28 Speaker_01
Like I'm in it for two hours, usually just like lubing the person up, like hanging out, like we're getting cozy, okay? And with the VP, I was like, there was a clock on. So that was a little uncomfortable to me that I was on someone else's terms.

00:12:41 Speaker_01
But overall, I thought it was a very incredible conversation and the amount of research and time I put into this interview was probably the most I've ever done in my career because I had fracking conversations written down.

00:12:56 Speaker_01
I'm like, ooh, we could go into this and this. But I, at the end of the day, ultimately decided I just wanted to focus on women's rights. And I know some people were like, why didn't you ask her about the border? Go watch CNN. I don't know.

00:13:08 Speaker_01
I'm going to talk about what's helpful to my audience.

00:13:12 Speaker_02
There's a little bit of controversy about that podcast, because you didn't. Do you know about this? No, what? Because in DC, this interview happened in DC.

00:13:19 Speaker_01
Yeah.

00:13:20 Speaker_02
In a hotel.

00:13:21 Speaker_01
Uh, yeah. Not in a hotel. It was like a random house.

00:13:25 Speaker_02
It was like a random house. But apparently, you can tell me, they spent, I mean, the Harris campaign spent like $100,000. I did, yeah. You know about this?

00:13:36 Speaker_01
It's hilarious.

00:13:36 Speaker_02
To build the studio. Yeah, that's not true. Not true. To make it look like it was the studio that you used in L.A.

00:13:44 Speaker_01
My studio that is gorgeous in Los Angeles doesn't even cost six figures, so I don't know how cardboard walls could cost six figures, but... But do you think they did that?

00:13:56 Speaker_02
I mean, you saw it.

00:13:57 Speaker_01
Absolutely not. With love to them. Oh, my God, it was gorgeous, but, like, it wasn't that nice. It wasn't, like, gorgeous marble. Like, no, that was not six figures.

00:14:11 Speaker_02
So Trump goes on Rogan.

00:14:14 Speaker_01
Yes.

00:14:15 Speaker_02
Do you think she should have gone on Rogan?

00:14:19 Speaker_01
I'm not the vice president of the United States. Maybe one day. No, I'm just kidding. I don't know. I think that's up to her. I think like, listen, I think we had a great conversation. I think she could have hung with him.

00:14:29 Speaker_01
But I think at the end of the day, they clearly had a campaign strategy that I wasn't in these meetings and I just did my job.

00:14:37 Speaker_02
Did you, have you ever gone on Rogan yourself? No. What do you think of, what do you think of what he does? Since you guys are, you guys are basically head to head.

00:14:44 Speaker_01
Yeah.

00:14:44 Speaker_02
Do you feel that way? Do you feel like he's your biggest competitor?

00:14:48 Speaker_01
I don't think, I don't think of Joe when I'm having my morning coffee every morning, but I'm very aware of the comparison in the media. Every single article probably that's ever been written about me, Joe Rogan is in the same sentence, which great.

00:15:05 Speaker_01
I mean, he's one of the biggest creators in the world. I've never met him. We had, like, a little, like, family tie when we were at Spotify together, and I have a lot of respect for what he's doing.

00:15:16 Speaker_02
We'll be right back. You have a big deal now at SiriusXM. Yes. And some people say that one of the reasons that SiriusXM wanted to get you is because that you could become the successor at some point to Howard Stern. What do you think of that?

00:15:41 Speaker_01
I just am like... I was going to say something saying like, I have a vagina, but that was going to be inappropriate. So let's rewind. I am a woman. Like, I don't need to keep being compared to these men. I'm like, I'm Alex Cooper.

00:15:53 Speaker_01
I'm going to be Alex Cooper all day. And if I happen to sit next to Joe Rogan or Howard Stern, put me in the middle. But I'm not trying to be the next Howard Stern. I think Howard Stern is so talented. What he has built is incredible.

00:16:07 Speaker_01
And I think what I have built is also incredible.

00:16:10 Speaker_02
So let's go back for just a moment in terms of this empire that you're building. No, no, I want to go back to this.

00:16:17 Speaker_01
No, I was laughing at like, why did I just say that? This is the thing I think about all day. I'm like, why did I just say that on this stage? But it's okay.

00:16:24 Speaker_02
Just go back in time, because one of the, so you're with Dave Portnoy. Yeah. And you're at Barstool. Yes.

00:16:31 Speaker_02
And I should ask, by the way, just because I think it's a fair question to ask, though I'm sure he would hate the question, which is there's been lots of things that have been written about Dave Portnoy that are not flattering, would be the politest way to put it.

00:16:45 Speaker_01
That is polite. I like that.

00:16:50 Speaker_02
What do you think of that, actually, as a woman? who knows him and has also read these things and may know other people or know other things about them.

00:16:59 Speaker_01
I mean, I think I could ask every single woman in this room, like, what's been said about your boss? probably similar stuff. If you think about any media company, I remember at Barstool, everyone was like, how do you work for Dave Portnoy?

00:17:12 Speaker_01
I'm like, should I go over to like, and then I named all the media companies. Everyone's like, I kind of have a point. Like, it's everywhere. It's not Dave Portnoy.

00:17:21 Speaker_01
So I think if anything, it's like, of course that's what's being said about him and many men.

00:17:27 Speaker_02
Well, I hope it's not everywhere.

00:17:29 Speaker_01
Not you. I feel like you're nice.

00:17:31 Speaker_02
Thank you. I'm trying. I'm trying. And so,

00:17:36 Speaker_01
I had too many coffees today.

00:17:38 Speaker_02
You're at Barstool. You're at Barstool. And we should say, by the way, you had a partner originally. Yes. Sophie Franklin was your partner back in the day. And there was a riff, a break, which you can go read about. And there's a whole lot about that.

00:17:58 Speaker_02
In retrospect, do you think that was the best thing that ever happened to you? Do you find that very sad that you sort of started one way and went another way? What's the emotional piece of that?

00:18:07 Speaker_02
Because a lot of people, and I think we have a lot of business leaders here, who have partners, or start with partners, end up without partners. And I'm really just curious how you think about that emotionally.

00:18:18 Speaker_01
I mean, listen, I think a partnership is always going to be very difficult.

00:18:22 Speaker_01
I think anyone in this room that has a partner, even in life, like it could be romantic, it can be business, like that is a very hard dynamic because you are two complete different people trying to come to one agreement.

00:18:34 Speaker_01
And when I started Call Her Daddy, yes, I had a co-host. And we were from very different backgrounds. We wanted very different things. Like, I was the crazy maniac being like, I've wanted this my entire life.

00:18:46 Speaker_01
I have never been more passionate about something. I'm going to drive myself through a wall until I get what I want. And I think we just had very different ideas of what success in our life looked like. I am a mother f***er. I am never going to stop.

00:19:01 Speaker_01
I am going to be doing this till the end and then some, and we just did not align on what we wanted to do with our careers, and I think that's fine.

00:19:11 Speaker_02
You go from Barstool, you go to Spotify, and then you go to Sirius.

00:19:15 Speaker_01
Yes.

00:19:16 Speaker_02
So tell us about what you're trying to build here.

00:19:19 Speaker_01
Well, I think what I've built is a lifestyle and a community of people, right? Like at first it started as an IP that had a catalog and it was many episodes of me talking about my life and then I started interviewing people.

00:19:31 Speaker_01
And now I have a catalog that is obviously worth a lot of money.

00:19:34 Speaker_01
But aside from a catalog of just content, what the content has built is a community of primarily women who show up every week and want to be seen and heard and want to engage with the content.

00:19:48 Speaker_01
And from there, I thought to myself, how can I build past just a show if I do have this community that wants more? And I started the Unwell Network, which is now my company with my husband.

00:20:00 Speaker_01
And we have expanded where I'm now signing younger Gen Z creators to uplift their voices. And I'm very particular about who I choose that will work at this company.

00:20:10 Speaker_01
But I'm basically curating more and more creators so that when someone goes to my network, they know who I am and they like my content. And so they trust me to essentially create a palette for them of like, what else do you want to listen to?

00:20:23 Speaker_01
Here you go, there's five other shows. On top of that, because of the community aspect, I wanted to launch live events. I think a lot of people think that Gen Z wants to sit behind their phones and they don't want to go to live events.

00:20:36 Speaker_01
completely wrong. They want to be in person. They want to experience things. And so this past year and a half, I've launched two live tours that sold out in seven cities. And we've done live events.

00:20:49 Speaker_01
I did an event with the Red Sox where I showed up and we did an activation. We had more unwell jerseys on women than Red Sox jerseys. Love you, Red Sox.

00:20:58 Speaker_01
and the GM said it was the highest grossing night of the year, aside from Pride, and it was on a random Wednesday against the worst team in the league. So it was a pretty big success.

00:21:08 Speaker_01
So it's live events, we have touring now, we have television shows, we have movies, we have podcasting, and I never sleep.

00:21:17 Speaker_02
There's going to be some other stuff which I want to talk about in just a second, but I want to ask you this about building other stars effectively. Is the goal long term? to always have a show and to be the face and brand of this platform?

00:21:34 Speaker_02
Or you have Alex Earl now, who is taking off in a huge way, right? She may become massively popular, which would be great, I would imagine, for the network. But how do you think about that long-term?

00:21:47 Speaker_02
Would you like to build five or 10 of those and then hang out and be the producer of those things?

00:21:52 Speaker_01
I mean, I think I will always be talking because I literally can't shut up. But I love talking. I'm always going to be sitting in front of camera in some capacity, whether it's a podcast or it's a show on a streaming service. It can go either way.

00:22:07 Speaker_01
It's a talk show. I'm sitting. I'm talking to people. I love what I do. When it comes to the creators that I am signing, of course, I'm always like, there is the singles, there's the doubles, and then there's the home runs and the triples, right?

00:22:18 Speaker_01
Of course, I wish every single creator would be a triple, but I also think there's something beautiful about finding a creator where I was at when Dave Portnoy found me. I was a really ambitious kid that wanted to work hard and had a vision.

00:22:31 Speaker_01
I think a lot of the people that I've started to work with, I see so much potential in them, and I'm there to just help them in any way I can mentor them because I've been through a lot. But I want to be the face of this. It's not an ego thing.

00:22:44 Speaker_01
I'm pretty good at what I'm doing, so I'm just leading the charge a little bit here.

00:22:48 Speaker_02
TV. TV. You had a show during the Olympics. Do you want to do more TV?

00:22:54 Speaker_01
I love television, yes. I have so many meetings, I would say every other week with writers for scripted and unscripted.

00:23:02 Speaker_01
I'm very interested in the television space and I think it's something that my audience yet again, like all I ever think about is my audience. Do they like to watch TV? Yes. Do they like podcasts? Yes. Do they like to go to concerts? Yes.

00:23:13 Speaker_01
Do they like live events? Yes. Do they like merchandise? Yes. And so I'm constantly going into the avenues where I think I can explore for my audience.

00:23:21 Speaker_02
Okay, I have a final question for you, and it's actually about us, the legacy media. Okay. Oh. I'm very curious. I'm going to ask you for advice. Okay.

00:23:31 Speaker_02
There's a lot of people who say they distrust the legacy media, and they actually trust you over the legacy media. Yeah. And I'm very curious if you were advising us what you would tell us to do.

00:23:44 Speaker_01
Oh, that's hard. I've been having a lot of conversations recently because people have come up to me asking like, why you and not, you know, like a news reporter.

00:23:58 Speaker_01
And what's challenging is when I was growing up with my parents, I would sit in our family room and I would watch the news with my parents and I trusted the people and what they were saying. And unfortunately, yes, you're right, that has shifted.

00:24:14 Speaker_01
And I think there has been a wave of

00:24:19 Speaker_01
skepticism within the gens, I'm just speaking for Gen Z and millennials honestly, like I think a lot of us feel like we're getting sold a crock of sh** every week because when someone is knocking at you every day like, believe this, believe this, believe this, and it's the only thing you're constantly talking about,

00:24:36 Speaker_01
people don't want to be told what to do anymore. I think Gen Z, the minds of young creators and adults and young individuals, people want to figure it out for themselves. They don't want to be told what to do.

00:24:48 Speaker_01
And I think creators like me, I'm not having on a politician every week. So when I do, it's like, Oh shit, we better listen to this because they know I'm going to come at it from a perspective of I don't really have an agenda.

00:25:00 Speaker_01
So I think my advice would be finding a way when you are creating or whether you are selling or in business, finding a way to find any form of humanity that is not so perfectly lined up that it feels like I'm getting sold a fucking ad. Like, come on.

00:25:18 Speaker_01
Like, this is bullshit. It has to feel somewhat more organic. And I know that's challenging, but maybe you should give those young interns more of a voice, and maybe you should listen to them when they have some ideas.

00:25:30 Speaker_02
That was an organic conversation, everybody. Alex Cooper. Thank you, Alex Cooper. Thank you so very much.

00:25:35 Speaker_01
Thank you so much. Thank you. Thank you, guys. Thank you.

00:25:42 Speaker_02
DealBook Summit is a production of the New York Times. This episode was produced by Evan Roberts and edited by Sarah Kessler. Mixing by Kelly Piclow. Original music by Daniel Powell.

00:25:53 Speaker_02
The rest of the DealBook events team includes Julie Zhang, Hilary Kuhn, Angela Austin, Haley Hess, Dana Prukowski, Matt Kaiser, and Yanwei Liu. Special thanks to Sam Dolnik, Nita Lassam, Ravi Matu, Beth Weinstein, Kate Carrington, and Melissa Tripoli.

00:26:15 Speaker_02
Thanks for listening. Talk to you next time.