House of Content podcast

The Creator Spin on Branded Entertainment

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Branded entertainment is having a major comeback, but it doesn’t look like the old playbook. In this episode of House of Content, Christine and Janni break down why brands are moving beyond traditional campaigns and starting to think like studios, creating content that audiences would watch even if there were no logo attached.

From Starbucks’ creator-led New York Fashion Week moments to Airbnb’s cinematic storytelling and InStyle’s The Intern, the lines between advertising and entertainment are blurring fast. The new benchmark is simple: would you watch it anyway?

This episode unpacks the shift from one-off campaigns to always-on formats, why episodic content and behind-the-scenes storytelling are winning, and how brands like Beis are building entire content worlds instead of just running ads.

The conversation also explores how creators have fundamentally reshaped audience expectations, making entertainment-first content the new standard across platforms like TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube.

Plus, the show gets into what actually works in branded content today versus what still flops, and why some brands are now competing less with other advertisers and more with Netflix, creators, and culture itself.

If you work in marketing, social media, or the creator economy, this episode breaks down the biggest shift happening right now: the move from campaign thinking to show thinking.

What you’ll learn:

  • Why branded entertainment is trending again in 2026
  • The shift from campaigns to episodic content and recurring formats
  • How creators changed audience expectations for ads
  • What makes branded content actually entertaining (and what doesn’t)
  • Why brands are starting to act like media companies and studios

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