Cameo is making room for more than celebrity greetings, expanding its personalised messaging service to let anyone sign up to make custom videos for money.
Announced in a blog post on Tuesday, the platform has officially launched its CameoX initiative, which began a pilot program last May as a "strategic decision to allow just about anyone with a passion for engaging with fans to join the Cameo community."
Cameo has made millions through its celebrity video message offerings, seeing actors, athletes, musicians, influencers, multiple disgraced U.S. Congressmen, and racist far-right British politicians personalise greetings for varying rates — it was a particularly lucrative move for celebs during the COVID-19 pandemic and the SAG-AFTRA strike. In 2021, Cameo was valued at $1 billion. But celebrities have since reportedly left the platform in droves, for reasons including but not limited to pro-Russia propagandists tricking celebrities into spreading misinformation. Plus, Cameo had a run-in with the Federal Trade Commission for violating celebrity endorsement disclosures this year, which was not cheap.
SEE ALSO: Matt Gaetz joins Cameo like disgraced congressman before himSo, Cameo is pivoting to embrace more avenues of content creation and monetisation. Now, anyone can join Cameo through the company's revamped onboarding process, which no longer focuses on Cameo team outreach or follower thresholds.
"We realized we had missed out on thousands of talented individuals who could have made meaningful contributions to the marketplace,” said Cameo CEO Steven Galanis in a press statement.
"We missed SAG-AFTRA actors who had applied before landing breakout roles in hit Netflix shows. We missed emerging artists before releasing chart-topping singles. We missed creators before their viral moments on TikTok. And we missed pro athletes who applied while in college, prior to NIL rule changes that allowed them to monetize their talent. With CameoX, those days are over."
The company says CameoX has already been successful, seeing 31,000 "self-enrolled creators" sign up since the pilot began in May 2023. The company is pitching the platform as "an alternative earning stream for talent" for creators, including those who might already have a following on other sites like Twitch, YouTube, and TikTok — and who might have previously applied to join Cameo but were not allowed in. Now, Cameo says the onboarding process has been made easier for people to pass the test.
"Historically, talent could join the marketplace in three ways: 1) through outreach from the Cameo team, 2) via referral from another talent or talent manager, or 3) by applying directly. In the past three years alone, Cameo received over 100,000 applications from talent who did not meet the marketplace’s thresholds," reads the post.
"The issue: Cameo was missing a new wave of emerging creators who could benefit from the platform but weren’t allowed on. CameoX removes those barriers and allows talent to become part of the Cameo family in a matter of minutes...This change in policy is more in line with models like Twitch and YouTube, where anyone can join for free and begin to monetize their personas instantly."
Creators wanting to join CameoX can do so through the app or the website and complete an identity verification process. Cameo celebrities set their own prices, so creators will be able to do the same; creators get 75 percent of the booking price and can use the earnings calculator to see what numbers they're looking at.
文章
986
浏览
359
获赞
69586
Chunky baby seal born in Japan. Look at him, love him.
There is never a bad time to look at a cute baby animal, so please enjoy this adorable seal.The littRemembering John Lewis in his many tweets and viral moments
Congressman John Lewis, who died on Friday, proved again and again that politician Twitter can riseElon Musk tells employees smoking weed with Joe Rogan was 'not wise'
Remember that time Elon Musk smoked weed on The Joe Rogan Experience? And then NASA had to conduct aElon Musk will go to trial over 'pedo guy' comment
Tesla CEO Elon Musk will go to trial over his insults directed toward cave rescue diver Vernon UnswoWhy Google Maps might lose EV owners to Apple Maps (seriously)
After WWDC, electric car owners might want to consider Apple Maps over Google Maps.In iOS 14, AppleYouTuber MrBeast's 'Finger on the App' challenge went for 70 hours
Jimmy "MrBeast" Donaldson is at it again.The YouTuber, who is known for his elaborate stunts and casNextdoor scraps Forward To Police feature, doing the bare minimum
Amid renewed criticisms that the app facilitates racial profiling and other harmful policing issues,The rumors are true: These are all cakes.
If you're feeling slightly traumatized from seeing a gorgeous pair of Crocs sliced in half, a roll oGoogle Doodle celebrates tactile paving inventor Seiichi Miyake
A new Google Doodle might cause you to appreciate what's under your feet.In a neat illustration on MElon Musk endorsing Kanye, then reconsidering, is the world's shortest love story
It only lasted for three days. When Kanye West announced his candidacy to become President of the UnDisney World's reopening trailer gets an appropriately snarky response
If you're going to re-open one of the world's most popular theme parks during a pandemic, and in a UElon Musk tells employees smoking weed with Joe Rogan was 'not wise'
Remember that time Elon Musk smoked weed on The Joe Rogan Experience? And then NASA had to conduct aHarry and Meghan share a new pic of baby Archie for Mother's Day
Baby feet: a great way to celebrate Mother's Day.The Duke and Duchess of Sussex posted a new photo oYouTube says it can delete accounts that aren't 'commercially viable'
YouTube’s new terms of service has some users and content creators very worried that the compaTrump's campaign won't admit it, but they got trolled hard in Tulsa
Donald Trump and his campaign expected gigantic crowds at his latest rally in Tulsa, Okla., so much