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Get ready for a wave of TBPN clones after its blockbuster OpenAI deal

Get ready for a bumper crop of TBPN-style shows.

OpenAI scooped up the livestream talk-show startup on Thursday for an undisclosed sum.

“It is a wild move,” said Jack Westerkamp, cohost of the TBPN-esque show “Breaking and Entering,” which covers the advertising and marketing industries. The deal showcases the “sheer influence” TBPN has had on the tech industry, he added.

It also showed why there’s already been a handful of shows, including “Breaking and Entering,” inspired by TBPN.

TBPN has popularized — or rather, re-popularized — the live talk show.

The show’s split-screen format showcases mic’d-up hosts John Coogan and Jordi Hays (typically dressed in suits) alongside a busy spread of stock prices, tech headlines, and brand placements. They stream for three hours every weekday and consistently bring on high-profile guests, including Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman. Clips of the show travel far and wide on social media.

“It’s become a de facto must-watch” for Silicon Valley, said Reza Izad, a partner with Underscore Talent. “They’re entrepreneurial, good on camera.”

As with any media strategy, if it works, everyone’s going to try it. Imitation is the highest form of flattery, right? After all, TBPN’s format itself is a riff on the ESPN show “SportsCenter.”

“TBPN is a format that is repeatable,” said Adam Faze, cofounder of the social-media entertainment company Gymnasium. Live talk shows aren’t new. They are, however, ripe for disruption with new formats, Faze said.

“There’s going to start being a lot more competition,” he said.

Reign Maker Group CEO Jonathan Chanti just launched a new management firm for tech creators and is exploring other verticals. He said a big part of his strategy will be helping them create shows in the TBPN style.

“You need to be authentic, you need to substantiate your opinion, and you need to be able to translate complex matters into a simplified format,” he said.

He’s not alone.

There are competitor tech industry shows like “ETN,” a European tech-focused stream, or The Information’s “TITV.” TBPN even highlighted a Korean “version of our show” last summer.

Meanwhile, others are riffing on the style to stake a claim in various industries. Advertising has “Breaking and Entering”; Hollywood has a new show from the meme account Assistants vs. Agents, called “AvA Live”; and political junkies will soon have “Nobody Knows Anything.”

Livestreaming finds a niche

As platform algorithms have pushed everyone into their own content bubbles, the opportunity to build a business in a niche category has grown.

“You’re going to see more and more of it,” Westerkamp said. “It’ll only get nicher and nicher and nicher, in my opinion, the way that the algorithm is going and how good it is in assigning media to your specific interests.”

TBPN is “one of a couple live shows” that Warner Bailey, the host and founder of AvA Live, admired and drew inspiration from while coming up with his new show.

Bailey said his show will have a different aesthetic (including a decked-out cubicle set), structure, and length, but it will be livestreamed like TBPN. (Rion Harmon, cofounder of ad agency DayJob, who worked on TBPN’s branding, previously told Business Insider that the show’s “cacophony of logos” was intentional — and a nod to Formula 1 racecars.)

“The benefit of live is you’re creating an environment that really leans into authenticity in an environment where there’s a content abundance, and everything seems to be overly polished,” Bailey said.

Copycats may have a moment in the sun, but it’s not a guarantee they’ll last.

“It’s unbelievably saturated, especially the world of podcasts,” Bailey continued. “You need to create durable IP and longevity. You need to carve out a differentiation.”

Just because the format is replicable doesn’t mean everyone will see a payday like TBPN, either.

“I’m fearful for the amount of slop that’s going to come on the other side of this,” Faze said. “Not from TBPN, but from people thinking that this is easy and that they too are going to have a hundred million dollar acquisition.”




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I asked Taco Bell’s CMO what his go-to order is. I wasn’t ready for the hot-sauce count.

A person’s go-to Taco Bell order is a sacred thing.

Selena Gomez was eating a Mexican Pizza when Benny Blanco proposed. Jason Sudeikis grabbed two chicken tacos on the night his son was born. When Dolly Parton would go through the drive-thru on dates with her husband Carl Dean, she always ordered a Taco Supreme.

I’m partial to the Cantina Chicken burrito, and just last week, I convinced three different friends to try it during our 1 a.m. Taco Bell run (which somehow racked up to $117, but that’s another story).

So, when I recently sat down with Taco Bell CMO Taylor Montgomery, I knew I had to find out what his usual order is. Montgomery eats at the fast-food chain every other day, but his go-to hasn’t changed — nor has his wild hot-sauce count.


Taylor Montgomery and Benson Boone at Live Más LIVE,

Taylor Montgomery and Benson Boone at Live Más Live on March 3.

Courtesy of Taco Bell



“My order is still the same,” Montgomery, who has worked at Taco Bell for a decade, told me. “Crunchy tacos, one Fire sauce packet per bite. I have like 10 sauce packets per taco.”

“If I’m really hungry, it’s three tacos,” Montgomery added. “If it’s a normal day, it’s two.”

“Per bite!?” I asked. I’ve been known to rip through a few of Taco Bell’s hot and avocado verde salsa packets myself, but 10 was a whole new level.

“Oh yeah,” Montgomery replied. “You gotta go big. Fire sauce, only Fire.”

‘We truly are one of one’

While some fast-food brands have spent the past week trying to outdo each other with burger taste-test videos, Taco Bell has been focusing on the premiere of Live Más Live, an annual event where the chain unveils every new menu item it plans to release during the year.

Montgomery was originally inspired by Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference when he helped launch the first Live Más Live in 2024. This year, the CMO knew he wanted to shake up the format.


Taco Bell Live Más LIVE 2026

Taco Bell Live Más Live 2026 took place at the Hollywood Palladium in Los Angeles.

Courtesy of Taco Bell



“We truly are one of one, just like Apple, just like Amazon, just like Tesla,” Montgomery said. “So I started to look at how some of those companies are behaving, and they are behaving like entertainment companies. That’s what consumers want. That’s what consumers’ expectations are.”

“That’s how Live Más Live, an unhinged night in Hollywood, was born,” he added.

Taco Bell hired the production team behind the Academy Awards, made a streaming deal with Peacock, and rented out the Hollywood Palladium in Los Angeles for a one-hour awards show on March 3. Celebrities like Sudeikis, Doja Cat, Benson Boone, and Demi Lovato were on hand to help announce the 20-plus new items coming to Taco Bell’s menu in 2026.


Taco Bell's Fire Queso Sauce Packet

Taco Bell’s Fire Queso Sauce Packet is an edible version of the famous hot-sauce packet.

Courtesy of Taco Bell



Montgomery said he hopes the event makes Taco Bell’s fans feel “seen and heard,” noting that the chain also listened to their pleas for more sweet treats.

“One of the most requested things we hear from our fans is, ‘I want more desserts at Taco Bell,'” he said.

Crème Brûlée Crunchwrap Sliders, Strawberry and Cream Mexican Pizza Bites, and chocolate fudge empanadas will all be coming soon, but Montgomery said the core of Taco Bell’s brand is still “crunchy, cheesy, saucy, spicy.” This year’s menu slate even includes an edible version of Taco Bell’s Fire hot-sauce packet.

The real question is, will Montgomery be using 10 of them per taco?




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Savannah Guthrie asks for proof of life in tearful video appeal for her mother’s return: ‘We are ready to talk’

Savannah Guthrie shared a video message on Instagram on Wednesday pleading for her mother’s safe return.

Guthrie’s mother, Nancy Guthrie, has been missing since Sunday. She was last seen at her home outside Tucson, Arizona. Officials told NBC Nightly News on Monday that they believe she was “taken out of her home against her will.”

Guthrie appeared in the video alongside her siblings, Annie and Camron, and read from a prepared statement — at one point, addressing the people who may have her mother.

“As a family, we are doing everything that we can. We are ready to talk. However, we live in a world where voices and images are easily manipulated,” Guthrie said.

“We need to know, without a doubt, that she is alive, and that you have her. We want to hear from you, and we are ready to listen. Please, reach out to us,” she said.

In the nearly four-minute-long video, Guthrie described her mother as a “kind, faithful, loyal, fiercely loving woman of goodness and light,” and a person who is “funny, spunky, and clever.”

“Our mom is our heart and our home. She is 84 years old. Her health, her heart is fragile. She lives in constant pain. She is without any medicine. She needs it to survive. She needs it not to suffer,” Guthrie added.

In the closing seconds of the video, Guthrie spoke directly to her mother.

“Everyone is looking for you, Mommy, everywhere. We will not rest. Your children will not rest until we are together again,” she said. “We speak to you every moment. And we pray without ceasing, and we rejoice in advance for the day that we hold you in our arms again. We love you, Mommy.”

Both of Guthrie’s siblings also spoke, with her sister Annie saying she and her siblings are “just normal human people who need our mom.”

“Mama, mama, if you’re listening, we need you to come home. We miss you,” she said.

Near the end of the video, Guthrie’s brother Camron addressed their mother, saying, “We love you, Mom. Stay strong.”

On Wednesday morning, the sheriff’s office told Business Insider that Nancy’s home was “equipped with several cameras,” and that detectives are trying to determine what footage is available.

The FBI is also involved in the investigation.

“The FBI is doing everything in our power to bring Nancy Guthrie home to her family,” Jon Edwards, assistant special agent in charge of the FBI’s office in Tucson, said in a statement at a press conference on Tuesday.




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