React Media
React Media, LLC is an American digital media and entertainment company founded by brothers Benny and Rafi Fine. The Fines began creating content in 2003 and later founded their eponymous Fine Brothers Productions in 2011. Under the Fines, the company was known for producing various series on YouTube, including React and MyMusic.
React Media's YouTube channels include React, Bullseye, and People vs Food. The company also produces channels on Facebook, Snapchat and Instagram's IGTV. React has produced multiple shows, and released the feature film F the Prom, in 2017. FBE has over eight billion views and over 32 million subscribers.
Because of the controversy over an attempt to license and trademark the term "React", as well as the names of their series, React Media's channels lost hundreds of thousands of subscribers in early 2016. In 2020, the company became embroiled in allegations by both current and former employees of systemic and casual racism in the workplace, as well as the way in which they presented their content. In November 2021, the Fines ended their association with the company after it was acquired by Electric Monster Media.
Creators
Benny and Rafi Fine grew up in an Orthodox Jewish family in Brooklyn. The Fine Brothers began creating comedy sketches in adolescence upon receiving their first video camera. Benny, the elder brother, would "rope into making all kinds of weird stuff". They spent most of their teen years in Sullivan County, New York. Benny started college at age 15, while Rafi attended Dickinson College for two years before transferring to Hunter College, where he got a degree in film studies. The two began entertaining their friends with short sketches and full-length comedies shot with action figures.They created a live action feature film in 2000 that made its way into comedy film festivals, and that they were planning to create a feature each year, hoping one would soon help them break into Hollywood. Despite winning young filmmaker awards, they soon concluded this method would not be the best path and decided their future was on the internet, which they viewed at the time as the new film festival. The brothers created their first website in 2003 and uploaded their first web video in 2004.
History
The Fine brothers created the YouTube channel TheFineBros in 2007. In 2009, the brothers joined Maker Studios, a then newly-formed incubator for YouTube talent. They described themselves as "the head of production and head of creative." The duo ran Maker Studios throughout 2009 and were responsible for the early success and planning for what became known as multi-channel networks.They launched a secondary channel in May 2009 and made YouTube their full-time jobs in July 2010. On October 16, 2010, they uploaded the first episode of Kids React. This was the first series in what would later become their React franchise on YouTube. They incorporated the video production company as Fine Brothers Productions, Inc. on December 13, 2011. Between 2009 and 2012, the brothers received media coverage in The Wall Street Journal, Time magazine, Variety, and MSNBC.
The Fine Brothers were guest judges on the second season of the web series Internet Icon in 2013. In December 2013, the duo left Revision3 to sign with Fullscreen though remained vocal about YouTube multi-channel networks, devoting a segment in their update vlog series, Fine Time, discussing how to navigate them.
A third channel was launched in 2014, called React, to expand their React content. On April 30, 2014, it was announced that a spin-off of FBE's React series called React to That was going to be aired on Nickelodeon. FBE said in an episode of Fine Time, however, that they planned on continuing to upload YouTube videos consistently. Nickelodeon aired 12 episodes of the show. The brothers also created and hosted the TV series Six Degrees of Everything that aired on TruTV in 2015. In early 2016, New York detailed that their company employed around 50 people.
On January 26, 2016, FBE announced they would license and trademark their existing React series and let creators create their own "React" content. In particular, FBE applied to trademark, among other terms, the word "react", which is used in the title of many other YouTube videos unrelated to FBE's YouTube channel. The announcement was met with a backlash from some of their viewers and fellow YouTube content creators, many of whom believed FBE was attempting to prohibit the creation of reaction videos by people unaffiliated with their channel. In response, the company promised they would "not be trying to take revenue from other types of reaction videos, and will not be copyright-striking".
There were also reports that another YouTube channel had produced Seniors React videos just prior to FBE's Elders React series. The backlash led to a dramatic drop in subscribers, with upwards of 675,000 accounts collectively unsubscribing from the React and FBE channels in protest as of February 22, 2016. On February 1, 2016, FBE stated they had rescinded all React trademarks and trademark applications, discontinued the React World program, and released all previous Content ID claims. FBE removed their original React World announcement video, and their update video, which addressed the initial backlash.
Marc Hustvedt joined FBE as CEO in July 2018, coming from the New York-based digital brand Above Average. Prior to Above Average, Hustvedt was co-founder and CEO of Supergravity Pictures, a digital-first entertainment studio and distributor that was later acquired by Gunpowder & Sky. Hustvedt also is a co-founder of trade publication Tubefilter and the Streamy Awards. At the start of 2019, FBE acquired Officially Pinned, an upstart that creates collectible pins in collaboration with content creators. Officially Pinned gets certified approval from creators and rights-holding partners to vend the pins and works directly with the parties involved to collaborate on the designs—hence the "official" part of the name. Disney pin-trading culture inspired Officially Pinned. As of May 2019, their main channel had more than 19 million subscribers and 7.8 billion video views.
FBE partnered with the interactive video company Eko in July 2019 to produce 12-plus interactive TV pilots that consist of scripted and unscripted formats and game shows and socially driven experiences. Eko and FBE teamed up on the production of Epic Night, a four-episode branching-narrative series about a college-party adventure. For the Eko partnership, FBE established an Interactive Content Lab to expand the studio's interactive storytelling capabilities by developing, funding and shopping new formats.
In summer 2020, a video resurfaced which showed Benny Fine in blackface portraying a character in a Degrassi TV show parody by Shane Dawson.In June 2020, former employees spoke out about their experiences working at FBE, which included allegations of racism by the company. In January 2021, Insider published a report, which contained allegations the company cultivated casual racism. One employee claimed she was told at times to have a reactor with lighter skin on the left of video thumbnails. Insider said that in 434 thumbnails that included one person of color and one white person, 238 of them, had the white person on the left side. People interviewed for the article alleged white people were favored to appear in React videos.
In September 2020, the company announced the rebranding of their channels FBE, FBE2 and REACT as REACT, FBE, and REPLAY, respectively. FBE began restructuring, which led to the layoffs of 17 employees in December 2020. In November 2021, React Media, LLC was acquired by Electric Monster Media, run by CEO Matt Gielen. Benny and Rafi Fine did not join the latter, and are no longer associated with React Media.
YouTube series
React series on FBE Channel and React Channel
On their main channel, the brothers upload a multitude of series, creating some of the most popular scripted, narrative, and unscripted series including their reaction series. They released behind-the-scenes content, as well as clips from their news podcast All We Know on the secondary channel. FBE launched a series titled Kids React on October 16, 2010, the first video being Kids React to Viral Videos #1 ''. The Kids React series features The Fine Brothers, off-camera, showing kids several viral videos or popular YouTubers and having the kids react to them.The series led to spin-offs uploaded on the company's channel, featuring kids, teens, elders, staff, adults and YouTubers. Because of the increasing success of the React franchise, FBE, in collaboration with Nick Cannon, later developed a television series for Nickelodeon, titled React to That. Later, FBE launched a separate "React" YouTube channel, with additional reaction-related videos, including remixes of past reaction footage and cast members reacting to video games, among other content. Aside from the series that the brothers directed, produced, and uploaded, the duo has uploaded popular interactive YouTube videos. The company's channels are under the YouTube partner program, allowing them to earn money from ad revenues on their videos. Ford and Comedy Central have sponsored them.