2020-03-26_The_Hollywood_Reporter

(Tuis.) #1

THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER 49 MARCH 26, 2020


Illustration by Adam Simpson

T


hey’re converting garages,
dressing home offices like
sets, even transforming their
living rooms with stage light-
ing. The hosts of two dozen Quibi news
shows are doing everything they can
to ensure that they will be ready when
Jeffrey Katzenberg and Meg Whitman
launch their brazen $2 billion bet
on the future of mobile entertain-
ment April 6.
The coronavirus pandemic has
upended production on the slate of
current events-driven shows, dubbed
Daily Essentials, that Quibi is rely-
ing on for its debut. So producers are
finding creative ways to proceed with
filming. Tim Kash, who will host
music show Pop5, has moved a scaled-
down set into his garage, and Jimmy
Mondal, the face of gaming show
Speedrun who is now shooting from
his living room, has been watching
YouTube makeup tutorials so he can
handle his own touch-ups. They’re all

Quibi Was


Always Risky.


And Then


Things Got


Complicated


Even in the best of times, Jeffrey Katzenberg and Meg Whitman’s $2 billion talent-friendly mobile
platform was a high-stakes gamble. Now, with the global pandemic turning the world upside down as
they barrel toward their April 6 debut, they are about to find out whether the millions of potential users
under quarantine are a subscriber-boosting blessing or a platform-derailing curse By Natalie Jarvey

60 Minutes-inspired 60 in 6, which
is on hold after an outbreak inside
CBS News.
The final days before launch would
be a frenzied period for any startup,
but the unprecedented global shut-
down brought about by the coronavirus
— which has infected more than
52,000 people in the U.S. and killed
more than 18,000 worldwide — has
added a new level of uncertainty to
Quibi’s already high-stakes debut.
The company’s 265 employees
transitioned to work-from-home days
filled with Zoom conference calls after
the March 16 closure of its Hollywood
headquarters. Meanwhile, Katzenberg
and Whitman are still working out
details on what to do instead of the
star-studded party they had planned
(now canceled, along with virtually
all L.A. gatherings) for the eve of
Quibi’s launch. Alternate options, like
bringing talent to Quibi’s offices for
individual shoots, were quickly called

rushing to get the process in place to
meet the deadline to start trial runs
one week ahead of launch.
“On the majority of our shows, our
partners have been very entrepre-
neurial,” says Katzenberg. “And, you
know, they’re delivering.” So far, he’s
expecting the premieres of only two
shows to be delayed, including Hot
Off the Mic, which relies on recent
footage of comedy club sets, and the

Jeffrey Katzenberg
and Meg Whitman
announced the name
of their mobile video
startup (short for
“quick bites”) at
the 2018 Vanity Fair
New Establishment
Summit.

10fea_quibi_L [P]{Print}_53657977.indd 49 3/24/20 9:08 PM

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