Afleveringen
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This week, Ed sits down with Sam Houlding, MD of B2B at Spotlight Sports Group. They unpack Spotlight Sports Group's "The Horse Racing Audience Opportunity" report, and horse racing's 200 million untapped fan opportunity. They get into why the sport has a product problem that isn't really about the product, the F1 playbook the sport could follow, what Melbourne Cup and Smart View are getting right, why fandom needs to come before betting, and the shared conviction that racing needs to unlock its next era.
To listen to every episode, head to dizplai.com. Email [email protected] to be a guest.
CHAPTERS
00:00 Intro & Sam Houlding on the Horse Racing Audience Opportunity
03:00 Inside Racing's 200 Million Fan Pyramid
08:00 The Product Problem That Isn't About the Product
17:00 The F1 Playbook: Where Racing Could Follow
26:00 What Melbourne Cup and France Galop Get Right
34:00 Smart View, Betting, and the Case for Accessibility
40:00 The Shared Conviction Racing Needs Next
SHOW NOTES
The Horse Racing Audience Opportunity report:
Spotlight Sports Group:
Racing Post
Sam Houlding LinkedIn
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This week, Ed sits down with Andy Marston, now the permanent co-host of the show. They unpack Tennis Australia's new partnership with the PGA Tour to deliver the 2028 Presidents Cup, Forbes' 2026 Top Creators list showing the top 50 hit $1 billion for the first time ever, Wimbledon's new BBC deal and the IBM AI features that follow, Meta's parallel plan to build and buy its way into prediction markets, and why YouTube just overtook Reddit as the top source in AI search.
To listen to every episode, head to dizplai.com. Email [email protected] to be a guest.
CHAPTERS
00:00 Intro & Welcome Andy Marston as Permanent Co-Host
00:20 Tennis Australia Runs Golf's Presidents Cup
06:15 How the Top 50 Creators Just Made $1 Billion
12:20 Wimbledon Extends BBC Deal + IBM's AI Rollout
18:30 Meta's Prediction Market Play
26:45 How to Get Discovered in AI Search
30:50 Wrap-Up + Sports Pundit x Dagenham Event
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Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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The Attention Shift is a weekly news roundup covering sport, media, culture and the creator economy. Each episode Ed Abis is joined by a rotating co-host or industry guest to break down the stories shaping how the industry works now, built for senior sports and media professionals.
This week Ed sits down with Andy Marston of Sports Pundit. They unpack the launch of Andy and Jamie Murray's new YouTube channel The Set, the BBC's first-ever creator watch-along sharing World Cup rights with the Sidemen, the Snapchat research showing Gen Z fans check their phones 10 times a match, ESPN's new first-party fan identity platform Fan House, and the PGA Tour's radical restructure introducing promotion and relegation to American golf for the first time.
To listen to every episode, head to dizplai.com. Email [email protected] to be a guest.
CHAPTERS
00:00 Intro & Welcome to Andy Marston
00:30 Andy Murray's New YouTube Channel The Set
08:30 The BBC x Sidemen World Cup Watch-Along
15:00 Why Gen Z Fans Check Their Phones 10 Times a Match
20:30 ESPN Just Built Its Own Fan Identity Platform
24:30 The PGA Tour's Radical Restructure
31:50 Wrap-Up
Shownotes
The Sports Pundit Newsletter Sports Pundit Social Club Andy Marston LinkedIn Ed Abis LinkedInHosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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The Attention Shift is a weekly news roundup covering sport, media, culture and the creator economy. Each episode Ed Abis is joined by a rotating co-host or industry guest to break down the stories shaping how the industry works now, built for senior sports and media professionals.
This week Ed sits down with Rich Johnson. They unpack the BBC Sport app's record-breaking World Cup engagement numbers, how CazéTV just made YouTube history with 12.4 million concurrent viewers during Brazil vs Morocco, FIFA's record opening week and the strategy behind it, the Reuters Institute Digital News Report showing social media has overtaken TV as the world's news source for the first time ever, and why Kings League just cut half its staff weeks after drawing 120 million livestream viewers.
To listen to every episode, head to dizplai.com. Email [email protected] to be a guest.
CHAPTERS
00:00 Intro & Welcome to Rich Johnson
00:30 The BBC's World Cup Innovations
06:45 FIFA's Record-Breaking Opening Week and Cultural Strategy
15:00 How CazéTV Just Made YouTube History
20:45 Social Media Overtakes TV for News
27:30 Why Kings League Just Cut Half Its Staff
37:30 Wrap-Up
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This week Ed sits down with Rory Natkiel, founder of Box Count and Chair of the Sponsorship Effectiveness Forum. They unpack the Sponsorship Effect, the largest analysis of sponsorship effectiveness ever done, with 92 case studies coded to IPA standards. The 3 to 1 gap between the top 30% of sponsorships and the rest. Why the industry has been measuring the wrong things for decades. Why live sport is the last mass moment in fragmented media. And the creativity problem holding sponsorship back from advertising's effectiveness curve.
To listen to every episode, head to dizplai.com. Email [email protected] to be a guest.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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The Attention Shift is a weekly news roundup covering sport, media, culture and the creator economy. Each episode Ed Abis is joined by a rotating co-host or industry guest to break down the stories shaping how the industry works now, built for senior sports and media professionals.
This week Ed sits down with Harry Macey from Dizplai. They unpack Starmer's blanket ban on social media for under-16s, going further than Australia's December 2025 law. Why the Sidemen's manager just told the BBC Charter Review that public service broadcasting has lost Gen Z. The IAB's formal declaration of creator marketing as a $44BN core media channel. Telemundo's most aggressive-ever digital World Cup strategy. And the $300M live commerce category quietly built on sealed sports card packs.
To listen to every episode, head to dizplai.com. Email [email protected] to be a guest.
CHAPTERS
00:00 Intro & Starmer's Under-16 Social Media Ban
06:00 The BBC's Gen Z Problem
11:00 Creator Marketing Just Became a $44BN Core Channel
17:25 Telemundo's All-In World Cup Strategy
21:30 Sport Card Breaking and the $300M Live Commerce Economy
26:00 Wrap-Up
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The Attention Shift is a weekly news roundup covering sport, media, culture and the creator economy. Each episode Ed Abis is joined by a rotating co-host to break down five stories shaping how the industry works now, built for senior sports and media professionals.
This week Ed sits down with Ellie Walter from Dizplai. They unpack Premier Padel and Red Bull's new mobile game Court Legends, designed to fix padel's pro circuit awareness problem. Kings League's revenue model where less than 5% comes from media rights and 85% of fans are under 35. HMA's landmark PrizePicks partnership across 200+ local YouTube shows. TikTok's new Local Feed rolling out in the US. And Unilever's biggest-ever sports activation, moving half its marketing budget to creators for the World Cup.
To listen to every episode, head to dizplai.com. Email [email protected] to be a guest.
CHAPTERS
00:00 Intro & Welcome to Ellie Walter from Dizplai
00:30 The Real Reason Red Bull Built a Padel Game
06:38 Kings League's Creator-First Model
12:01 The Biggest Sports Media Deal of 2026 Goes to YouTube
16:51 TikTok Goes Local
22:15 Why Unilever Bet Half Its Budget on Creators
27:54 Wrap-Up
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Seb Losardo is the YouTube strategist behind 10 billion views. His client roster at Grow Media Club includes WillNE, John Nellis, Quadrant, Billy Wingrove, Laura Woods, and The Switch with Kevin Pietersen, collectively pulling 700 million views every month. Featured in Humble&Brag's 13 Best YouTube Strategists in the World as "The Professionaliser", he's the strategist who took YouTube from creator economy to media industry.
Ed sits down with Seb to unpack the journey from Sky Sports to founding Grow Media Club. The 40:30:30 rule that flips how most creators think about time. Outlier mining and how to find videos that 10x a channel's baseline. The strategy behind The Switch with Kevin Pietersen, which did 12 million views on its first upload. And what the next generation of athletes, Haaland, Bellingham, KP, are about to do to the World Cup.
To listen to every episode of The Attention Shift, head to dizplai.com.
Got a question for us, or want to join us as a guest? Email [email protected].
CHAPTERS
00:00 Intro & Seb's Journey From Sky Sports to Grow Media Club
06:11 Building the Business: Year One to 700 Million Views a Month
17:03 The 40:30:30 System: Why Packaging Beats Content
22:00 Outlier Mining: How to Engineer Viral Ideas
37:33 Inside The Switch With Kevin Pietersen
44:02 The Athlete Landscape: Haaland, Bellingham, Ronaldo and What's Next
56:00 Wrap-Up
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Joe Edwards, Marketing Director at Dizplai joins Ed for this week's news episode, stepping in as the first of several rotating Dizplai guest co-hosts. The five stories on the table all circle the same question: who actually owns the fan? From KSI walking away from the Sidemen to FIFA trying to identify every fan in a stadium, this week's news cycle is about identification, value exchange and the limits of free reach.
Ed and Joe break down KSI's shock exit from the Sidemen and whether it's real or a lost Arsenal bet. FIFA's new Fan ID, the most ambitious mass-identification play in sport history. MrBeast's Beast Industries entering the upfronts to compete for annual brand budgets. Fanatics' FanGraph advertising network, built on 2BN+ daily fan signals from 100M+ identified fans. And Tubi giving away the 2026 World Cup in 4K, for free, with no login required.
To listen to every episode of The Attention Shift, head to dizplai.com.
Got a question for us, or want to join us as a guest? Email [email protected].
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Esteban Gonzalez joined FIBA in 2015 on a three-month internship. Eleven years later, he's the Senior Digital Content Manager for FIBA 3x3 — a sport with 10 million followers, 1.1 billion video views and over $220M in media value generated for sponsors in 2025 alone. It's also the fastest sport ever to reach the Olympics — just five years from pro circuit launch to Olympic discipline.
In this episode, Ed sits down with Esteban to break down how FIBA 3x3 built one of the most efficient content engines in world sport. Why digital-first was a strategic choice, not a fallback. How brands like Mitsubishi Electric are buying teams rather than sponsoring them. Why Karl Lagerfeld and Elle want in. And the next bet, moving off-platform to own the audience instead of renting it.
To listen to every episode of The Attention Shift, head to dizplai.com. Got a question for us, or want to join us as a guest? Email [email protected].
CHAPTERS
00:00 — Intro & Esteban's 11-Year Journey at FIBA 3x3
05:30 — What 3x3 Is and How It Reached the Olympics in 5 Years
11:40 — Why Digital-First Was a Strategic Choice
18:20 — The $220M Media Value Engine, Karl Lagerfeld and Mitsubishi
27:50 — AI, Localisation and Content Across YouTube, Instagram and TikTok
35:50 — Trends Reshaping Sports Content and the Rise of Private Communities
39:30 — The Next Chapter for FIBA 3x3
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In May 2026, five of the biggest media companies in America stood on a stage in New York and explained how they plan to make money for the next 12 months. YouTube declared itself TV. Disney pitched fandom. Fox did the opposite of everyone else. The 2026 upfronts didn't reveal one winner; they revealed five completely different bets on the next decade of media.
Ed and Jo unpack the five biggest upfronts one at a time. Why YouTube has officially repositioned creator-led shows as premium TV inventory. What it actually means that Disney is now selling fandom instead of exclusivity. Why Fox has divested traditional networks and gone all-in on Tubi while Paramount and Warner Bros. merge. Plus NBC owning Sunday, Warner Bros. Discovery's pre-merger pitch, and the one network whose strategy stood out most to both of them.
New episode every Wednesday. Listen wherever you get your podcasts or at dizplai.com/podcasts. Want to feature as a guest or want a question answered on the show? Email us at [email protected]
Chapters
00:00 — Intro & Jo's News
01:00 — YouTube Officially Becomes TV
04:50 — Disney Sells Fandom, Not Exclusivity
10:15 — Fox Zigs While Everyone Else Zags
15:35 — How NBC Just Owned Sunday
21:00 — Inside WBD's Pre-Merger Upfront
26:30 — Wrap-Up & Farewell to Jo
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A two-time major champion just told reporters he'd rather grow his YouTube channel than go back to the PGA Tour. Bryson DeChambeau wants to play "tournaments that want him", and treats his 2.6 million-subscriber channel as the long-term career play. The player-as-creator thesis just went mainstream.
That's one of five stories Ed and Jo unpack this week. TikTok has hired Issa Rae's Hoorae Media to commission its first scripted Original Series. Duke just signed a first-of-its-kind college rights deal with Amazon Prime Video, and the Big Ten objected within 72 hours. The World Fencing League's blade-tracking tech turned every sword tip into a lightsaber trail and pulled hundreds of millions of views in a week. Plus FIFA walks away from a 50-year Panini relationship for a long-term Fanatics deal.
Chapters
00:00 — Intro
00:30 — Why Bryson Picked YouTube Over the PGA
05:50 — TikTok is Launching Its First Original Series
11:30 — Amazon Invests in College Sports
16:05 — Fencing's VIRAL New Tech
21:00 — FIFA Drops Panini After 50 Years
27:00 — Wrap
New episode every Wednesday. Subscribe to the Dizplai newsletter to never miss an episode. Want to feature? Email us at [email protected]
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This week, Jo is joined by Robbie Spargo, Co-Managing Director at Little Dot Studios, one of the UK's leading social media and content agencies with nine billion organic views flowing through their network every month.
They cover where fandom is being built, why average view duration has overtaken raw views as the metric that matters, and what social commerce means for sports organisations trying to monetise their audiences.
Got a guest suggestion or question for Ed & Jo? Email [email protected]
00:00 Intro
02:40 Where fandom is built
04:49 YouTube becomes TV
09:31 Creators vs rights holders
16:30 Data and feedback loops
21:46 Super fandom as currency
26:00 The sports media ecosystem
31:11 Social commerce arrives
35:30 Wrap
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The fund that spent $5BN trying to build a global golf league just stopped writing the cheques. PIF is ending direct funding of LIV Golf after 2026.
The biggest sovereign wealth fund in sport just proved what every other backer already knew, you can't buy fandom on a tech-style timeline.
That's one of five strategic bets Ed and Jo unpack this week. Adidas is selling anime, not boots, six weeks out from the World Cup, chasing the Gen Alpha and female football fans most of the sport is sleeping on. iShowSpeed has been named Expedia's official travel partner, with a globe-style mini-site mapped to the places he's filmed. DAZN spent $100M on ViewLift to own the streaming pipes rather than chase rights. Plus the Circana forecast that $1 in every $10 of US retail spend could move through TikTok Shop by 2028.
Show Notes
Adidas Originals × streetwear anime World Cup drop.Expedia names iShowSpeed official travel partner.DAZN acquires ViewLift for $100M.Circana — TikTok Shop forecast to hit 10% of US retail by 2028.PIF to end direct funding of LIV Golf after 2026.New episode every Wednesday. Head to Dizplai.com/podcasts for the latest.
Want to feature? Email us at [email protected]
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The man who tried to build the European Super League just launched a fund that won't touch football. Andrea Agnelli is putting €100m into basketball, cricket, hockey and rugby instead. The most plugged-in operator in the sport thinks the valuation has peaked.
That's one of three strategic bets Ed and Jo unpack this week. Marc Jacobs has stopped making ads and started making a Rachel Sennett-fronted micro drama. The Financial Times has launched a standalone YouTube channel that hides the FT brand from the front door. Plus PayPal can finally prove a Connected TV ad drove a sale, and Powerade is treating the World Cup like a four-year platform.
Show Notes
Marc Jacobs' New Social Series.PayPal's Verified CTV Purchase Attribution Platform.Financial Times Launches New YouTube Series as Subscriber Acquisition FunnelPowerade's New World Cup Campaign, Power Your Fate.Andrea Agnelli's Sport Investment Fund.New episode every Wednesday. Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. Want to feature? Email us at [email protected]
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In this episode of The Attention Shift, Ed sits down with Chris Sice, Chief Content Officer of the ICONS Series, to explore how a golf tournament played by elite athletes from other sports has become one of the most compelling challenger sports brands in the world.
From building a distribution network across 25 publisher partnerships, to achieving a 49.8% interaction rate through the audience engagement hub, Chris breaks down what it takes to build a digitally native sports property from the ground up and why most traditional sports organisations are still getting it wrong.
Want to read more? Head to the Dizplai website and check out the show notes. Got a topic or question for Ed & Jo? Drop us a line at [email protected].
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Description: In this episode of The Attention Shift, Ed and Jo dissect Gary Neville's seven figure acquisition of Mark Goldbridge's YouTube channels, ask whether you can actually buy an engaged community, and explore what it means for fan creator consolidation across sport.
From UEFA quietly exploring a Champions League direct to consumer pilot, to Sky commercialising Soccer Saturday for the first time in 30 years, and YouTube staging its Brandcast at Lincoln Center to make a direct play for TV ad money, this week's stories all point to the same shift. The lines between broadcast, digital and creator are gone.
Want to read more? Head to the Dizplai website and check out the show notes. Got a topic or question for Ed & Jo? Drop us a line at [email protected].
Show notes:
The Overlap acquires Mark Goldbridge's YouTube channels in a seven figure deal.UEFA explores direct to consumer Champions League streaming pilot.Sky opens Soccer Saturday to integrated brand sponsorship for the first time in 30 years.Sport accounts for 60% of all US TV upfront ad commitments.YouTube Brandcast confirmed for May 13th at Lincoln Center.Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Justin Bieber performed for millions who weren't at Coachella through YouTube's live stream, engaging with fans in real time across seven simultaneous stages. The Nashville Predators have made every game free on a brand new local TV station, no subscription, no cable package. Golf's biggest YouTube creators have stopped competing against each other and launched a unified network selling sponsorship at TV level CPMs. YouTube is now letting creators clone themselves for Shorts. And Netflix Japan just proved that exclusivity can still win in a fragmented world.
Want to read more? Head to the Dizplai website and check out the show notes. Got a topic or question for Ed & Jo? Drop us a line at [email protected].
Show notes:
Coachella x YouTube 2026 livestream Nashville Predators go free-to-air Source Golf launches backed by Bolt Ventures YouTube AI avatars for Shorts Netflix Japan World Baseball Classic case study Jo's newsletterHosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Nearly 90% of sports organisations are seeing flat or declining revenue. The average rights holder can only identify 24% of their fanbase. And most are spending third party investment on athletes rather than the data infrastructure that could save them. Ben Wells, founder of PTI Digital and author of the Sports Leadership Benchmark, joins Ed to break down why the sports industry's revenue model is under more pressure than most leaders want to admit, what the data actually shows about fan anonymity, sponsorship squeeze and technology leadership, and what the organisations getting it right are doing differently.
Want to read more? Head to the Dizplai website and check out the show notes. Got a topic or question for Ed & Jo? Drop us a line at [email protected].
Show notes:
Download the PTI Sports Leadership BenchmarkDownload the Dizplai Anonymous Fan IndexHosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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The NFL just gave 32 clubs permission to become media companies. Social as owned media, highlights on TikTok, in-game content now sponsorable, and clubs can now sell original content directly to streamers. All landing right before the league renegotiates its entire media deal.
OpenAI has acquired a daily live tech show that previously covered them as a subject. DAZN has launched a global creator programme timed perfectly to the World Cup. And 70% of publishers fear creators are stealing their audiences. Their response? Become them.
Want to read more? Head to the Dizplai website. Got a topic or question for Ed & Jo? Drop us a line at [email protected].
Show notes
NFL Teams Just Got the Keys to Their Own Digital Kingdom.OpenAI Buys TBPN.DAZN Launches Playmakers, the New Global Creator Programme.Daily Mail Puts 25+ Creators on Payroll.Reddit Opens Pro Publisher Tools to All. Views Up 46%, Comments Up 48%.Sponcon Sports newsletterHosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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