Digital video is one of the most marketable tools for companies and individuals and YouTube is at the heart of the world of digital video. Popular YouTube channels can make millions of dollars a year in ad revenue, which has created a new brand of celebrity - the YouTuber.
YouTube influencers Brooke Miccio and Danielle Carolan join to share their tricks of the YouTube trade. Miccio says it's all about creating consistent and authentic content.
Carolan and Miccio also talk about the rising trend of shoppable video. Both of the YouTubers worked with Dote, an app that makes video content shoppable. They say that creating shoppable content really makes a difference for engagement, and also means more money in the bank for YouTube influencers.
Jill and Carlo are talking impeachment, the debate over the minimum wage, Fauci's vaccine strategy, and how the media did Britney Spears dirty in the early 2000s. Plus, some special guest hosts coming up and other housekeeping.
Andrene Ward-Hammond, who plays Big Mo on Showtime's "Your Honor" talks to Cheddar about how the limited series reflects the ongoing issues of inequity in the U.S. criminal justice system.
Rescuers in northern India are working to rescue more than three dozen power plant workers trapped in a tunnel after part of a Himalayan glacier broke off and sent a wall of water and debris rushing down a mountain.
In the 1920s, an army of real estate boosters set out to redefine Florida from an economic backwater to a ritzy vacation destination, sparking a land boom — and bust — the likes of which America had never seen before.
Jill and Carlo talk Super Bowl 55: Tom Brady gets the last laugh, The Weeknd gets mixed reviews, and the commercials we're still talking about. Also, the good news and bad news on Covid.
It's Big Game time and Frito-Lay says it knows people will reach for the chips, dip, and other savory, salty, or sweet treats more than ever.
Despite the dairy industry spending over $30 million dollars between 2005 and 2010, they may not have a stranglehold on the market anymore.
Jill and Carlo end the week with several promising developments on the pandemic, from plummeting hospitalization numbers to record vaccinations. Plus, can Tom Brady play an underdog in the Super Bowl? And Love, Hate, Ate!
It took just one tweet from Rihanna to anger the Indian government and supporters of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s party.
We've got some more good vaccine developments, including Fauci's first comments on whether pregnant women should get it. Plus, a proxy war plays out for the future of the Republican Party, disassembling the Golden Globe nominations, and is it possible to separate the art from the artist? Ask Morgan Wallen.
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