amid allegations of racial discrimination and after an old picture of Rapoport in brown face surfaced.)
Sabia said his leaving Condé Nast has nothing to do with the CNE executive shakeup or the company’s racial controversies. “I credit Condé with giving me all this freedom over the years,” he said. To date, CNE has amassed 47 million subscribers on YouTube across its portfolio of brands, with the channels generating 500 million views per month, Sabia noted: “We built something big; we built something special.” He said he’ll continue to work with CNE as the interviewer of “73 Questions,” among other clients.
During his time at Condé Nast Entertainment, Sabia led the development and creation of multiple talent-led video franchises, including Wired’s “Google Autocomplete Interviews,” W’s “Celebrity ASMR” on W, Glamour’s “You Sang my Song” and Vanity Fair’s “Lie Detector” and “Tinder Takeover,” and GQ’s “Actually Me” . He’s also interviewed singer-songwriter Billie Eilish for Vanity Fair’s “Same Interview, One Year Apart” series, starting in 2017.
Sabia, who will remain based in New York City, said his client roster includes Outlier, a platform offering online university courses founded by Aaron Rasmussen , as well as radio and podcast venture The Moth. He said he’ll also pursue creative collaborations with celebrities and commercial work, among other projects.
Turns out sidelining POC voices is not the kind of creativity they were looking. Mostly because IT’S BEEN DONE BEFORE.
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