YouTube announces new shows from Ellen DeGeneres, Kevin Hart, Katy Perry and more

YouTube wrapped up tonight’s BrandCast event for advertisers by announcing seven new shows.

Some of them come from YouTube stars like Rhett and Link, who are creating a long-form expansion of Good Mythical Morning, and The Slow Mo Guys, who are launching something called The Super Slow Show.

The other shows feature stars from beyond YouTube. There’s Ellen’s Show Me More Show, a twice-weekly behind-the-scenes program from Ellen DeGeneres; Kevin Hart: What the Fit, a fitness show starring the eponymous comedian; I Am: Demi Lovato, which shows the process of writing and recording Lovato’s new album; a Katy Perry Live Special; and Best.Cover.Ever., produced by Ryan Seacrest and hosted by Ludacris, where fans from around the world can compete to duet with their favorite musicians.

All of these shows will be ad-supported, a point underlined by YouTube Chief Business Officer Robert Kyncl. More and more content, he said, is being created for ad-free subscription services (like Netflix) and for premium cable: “We see these shows as a way to partner with you to buck this trend.”

YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki acknowledged that YouTube may have to do more work than usual to win advertisers over, given recent concerns around brand safety — namely, the fact that some ads were running alongside offensive content, unbeknownst to the advertisers.

“We apologize for letting some of you down,” Wojcicki said. “I’m here to say that we can and we will do better. Over the past few weeks, our teams have been working around the clock to make important changes to make sure ads show up in the right place.”

By the way, that line I tried to draw earlier between YouTube and non-YouTube stars seems to be blurring — a point underlined by James Corden, one of the night’s performers. Corden said he was actually “quite reticent” about taking his current Late Late Show hosting gig, because he wasn’t sure how much impact he could have with a TV show that aired after 12:30am every night. Apparently, it was YouTube that changed his mind.

“I realized that I didn’t have to make a show for any time slot, because we have the internet, and more than that we had YouTube,” Corden said. “Here was a platform that allowed us to show every second of our show throughout every minute of our day, and if it’s good, people will find it.”

So Corden said his team worked to create “the most conventional television talk show that could be sliced up and found by an audience whenever they wanted to find it.”

The approach has paid off, with Corden’s carpool karaoke video with Adele becoming the most viral video of 2016, and The Late Late Show receiving 2.8 billion views on YouTube over the past two years.