Try GOLD - Free
How YouTube Ate IV
Fast Company
|Fall 2025
AN ORAL HISTORY OF THE VIDEO PLATFORM THAT CHANGED EVERYTHING
IN YOUTUBE'S EARLY DAYS, THE ODDS SEEMED GOOD THAT THE PLATFORM would be destroyed—not by a competitor, but by its own popularity.
How could any young video startup ever cover the cost of streaming so much content across the internet? Or avoid the fate of Napster, another media-sharing startup of the era that was sued out of business for rampant copyright infringement? Even being acquired by Google in 2006 posed a risk: YouTube could have been mismanaged into irrelevance, as often happens after tech giants acquire shiny new toys.
But over its first 20 years, YouTube didn't just survive—it revolutionized media, redefining what TV could be. By letting anyone upload video for free, it empowered a new generation of creators to cater to every imaginable audience—and attract fan bases in the millions. It taught marketers to appreciate the value of reaching these viewers, and it used technology to give rights holders control over their content. The platform conquered PCs and then smartphones and was eventually available on nearly every new TV set.
Today, with 2 billion logged-in users a month, YouTube is watched more than any traditional TV outlet. According to Nielsen, the company has grown its total viewers by nearly 50% since December 2023, bounding past Paramount, NBCUniversal, and Disney to take the top spot among media companies. It's now the U.S.'s most-watched video provider, not just among streamers but cable and broadcast TV channels, too. Its 2024 ad revenue was $36.15 billion, a figure that doesn't include subscription revenue from its YouTube Premium and YouTube TV businesses.
This story is from the Fall 2025 edition of Fast Company.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Fast Company
Fast Company
WHERE THE MARKETING SPORTS JOBS ARE
Here's everything you need to know about who's hiring at the teams, leagues, brands, agencies, and media companies powering one of the hottest fields in business.
4 mins
Fall 2025
Fast Company
PERSON to PERSON
Fast Company's invitation-only collective of mission-driven leaders explores how to reassert a human-centric approach, even amid Al's growing role in business.
1 min
Fall 2025
Fast Company
Ellie Takes Manhattan
LIBERTY MASCOT ELLIE THE ELEPHANT STOLE THE SHOW AS THE TEAM CELEBRATED ITS WNBA CHAMPIONSHIP.
2 mins
Fall 2025
Fast Company
THE BABY BLUEPRINT
Genomics startups like Orchid promise healthier children through advanced embryo screening. Do they deliver?
9 mins
Fall 2025
Fast Company
WALMART'S TIGHTROPE WALKER
As the retailer's chief merchant, Latriece Watkins is on one of the highest wires in business, balancing Walmart's upmarket move with a commitment to stay affordable.
6 mins
Fall 2025
Fast Company
ESPN CUTS THE CORD
ESPN chairman Jimmy Pitaro talks about the network's game-changing new streaming service, its big deal with the NFL, and his relationship with his boss, Disney chief Bob Iger.
10 mins
Fall 2025
Fast Company
INNOVATION BY DESIGN 2025
If you're worrying about the decline of human creativity in this age of machine-driven automation, spend some time perusing the following pages.
6 mins
Fall 2025
Fast Company
100 BEST WORKPLACES FOR INNOVATORS 2025
FOR THE SEVENTH YEAR, WE ASKED COMPANIES TO TELL US HOW THEY ARE CREATING CULTURES THAT EMBRACE INNOVATION NOT JUST AT THE TOP, BUT ACROSS THEIR ENTIRE ORGANIZATION. THESE 182 IMPRESSED OUR JUDGES THE MOST.
1 mins
Fall 2025
Fast Company
OFF TO THE RACES
Run for Something's Amanda Litman is minting candidates at scale.
6 mins
Fall 2025
Fast Company
STARBUCKS CEO BRIAN NICCOL
BUILT A REPUTATION FOR QUICKLY REVIVING FAST-FOOD EMPIRES. HE'S TRYING TO DO THE SAME FOR THE OFFEE GIANT BY REONNECTING THE BRAND WITH ITS ORIGINAL SOUL. BUT THIS TIME, CHANGE IS A SLOWER BREW.
16 mins
Fall 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

