Three YouTubers have completely changed the narrative in Hollywood from this place is dying to it's back. And that comes down to Markiplier, Curry Barker, and Kane Parsons. Markiplier self finances a movie for around $5 million called Iron Lung. He gets his audience to call movie theaters all around the country, gets it into 4,600 theaters, and it makes $52 million. Curry Barker, who's a sketch comedy creator, makes a movie called Obsession for just under a million. Blumbhouse Pictures sees it and gets involved in the distribution and it makes $148 million in the first 3 weeks. And then Kane Parsons, the 20-year-old director who made a YouTube video about this thing called The Back Rooms, develops it with A24. It cost $10 million to turn it into a feature. And in the first weekend, it makes $118 million, becoming A24's biggest opening weekend. I think what this means for Hollywood is that there is >> not only a new generation going to watch films, but a new generation of IP. Like all these studios own this IP that was beloved originally by people that are now in their 40s and 50s, but Gen Z has new IP. Back rooms started in 2019 on 4chan. Markiplier and Iron Lung first came out on his YouTube channel. It was his audience that was there at the inception before people even knew it would become a movie. All these stories include an element of the community being involved in the creation process of the film. >> It's now audiences being the ones to dictate what goes on the screen. >> The answer here is like it can be lower cost, right? Curry Barker, that's so impressive at under a million bucks to make that. >> He's in an interview and they ask him, "What have all these years on YouTube taught you about film making?" And he said, "When you're making for the internet, the audience is begging to leave. So you have to convince them to stay with every frame. >> That's so good. I also think this tells us that internet audiences are ready to get off the internet for a bit. That's a good one. >> Get out of their room by themselves and be with other people and have a collective experience. I think Hollywood has a bright future, especially with creators getting involved.