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    CNN parts ways with YouTube star Casey Neistat

    by 
    Swapna Krishna
    Swapna Krishna
    01.25.2018

    YouTube star Casey Neistat made headlines back in 2016, when CNN bought his company, Beme. While CNN quickly shut down the associated social video sharing app, the team behind it were supposedly working on something new for the news organization. Now, it appears that's not the case. Buzzfeed reports that CNN has closed the company behind the app, also called Beme, and Neistat is parting ways with CNN.

  • Noam Galai/Getty Images for TechCrunch

    Casey Neistat's Beme service shuts down following CNN deal

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    01.31.2017

    And just like that, YouTube star Casey Neistat's brief stint in mobile apps is over... for now, anyway. As promised, the social video service Beme is shutting down on January 31st following CNN's acquisition of the app in the fall. You can download an archive of all your clips to preserve them for posterity, but the software will likely have stopped working by the time you read this. The team has hinted that it's working on "something new," but you'll have to look for an alternative if you want to share your life in short snippets.

  • CNN snaps up Casey Neistat's video sharing app Beme

    by 
    Devindra Hardawar
    Devindra Hardawar
    11.28.2016

    In the hopes of bringing in a younger audience, CNN has acquired the social video sharing app Beme, which was most notably the brainchild of YouTube star Casey Neistat. Beme, which let you quickly shoot and upload four-second videos, will be shut down, the New York Times reports. Neistat and the app's 12 other employees will be working on a new project for CNN which will debut sometime next year. While the app only received around 1.2 million downloads, the deal mostly seems to be a way for CNN to bring Neistat aboard, a successful YouTube personality who's managed to cultivate a desirable millennial viewership.

  • Yahoo and Beme take on Snapchat with video sharing apps

    by 
    Mariella Moon
    Mariella Moon
    07.18.2015

    There's no shortage of apps that can take short video clips you can blast to friends. But if you're willing to branch out and try new things, Yahoo and YouTube celebrity Casey Neistat have released alternatives with different takes on video sharing. Neistat's iPhone app called Beme, for instance, starts recording four-second videos when you cover the sensor above the device's earpiece. In his demo below the fold, he shows how you can cover the sensor by placing the phone against your chest. The idea is that you get to experience life and see events with your own eyes instead of through a screen, even while recording what's in front of you.