The Clipping Economy: Why Every Band, Brand & Startup Is Faking Organic Growth

Sonia sits down with Jason Levin, founder of Memelord Technologies, to talk about: organic marketing isn't dead, it just got industrialized. And if the audience loves the music, does it matter how they found it?
We're talking about:
Geese psyop: Wired exposing Chaotic Good Projects running narrative campaigns for the band, TikTok backlash calling them an industry plant, and whether engineered ecosystems count as organic discovery
Chaotic Good's playbook: Building networks of TikTok accounts to play background music, share live clips, engineer engagement circles, and the co-founder saying "we can drive impressions on anything at this point"
Record labels using Memelord: Breaking new artists using videos, secretly putting music behind meme videos, and Jason getting calls from labels because breaking music is hyper-competitive right now (Suno is number one music app)
Astroturfing 101: Fan pages on Twitter for artists are run by record label interns, phone farms, buying YouTube views, and how the music industry has always worked
Brand fan accounts: Arby's Boys and Not Spirit Airlines pretending to be employees, getting more views than official brand accounts, and why saying things the brand can't say is more effective
In-house influencers: Staples baddie doing ASMR videos for love of the game, and companies realizing people want organic content from regular people
Secondary pages strategy: Jason's been running fake pages for unicorns for a year, allows brands to take more risk, leverage humor without touching the main account, and why memes won't save you if you don't have a good business
Follower economy is dead: TikTok proved followers don't matter, Twitter still follower-dominated but people complain about not getting access, and why early YouTubers with 3 million subscribers are asking "what do I do now"
Clipping economy: Movie studios putting summaries of Netflix shows directly on TikTok, Jason investing 10 grand into clipping with 40,000 kids on WhatsApp earning $2 per thousand views, and creativity from the masses beating three in-house editors
When clipping works vs. doesn't: Great for fame/virality/music/movies, doesn't work for startups (go into your CRM and book calls instead), and companies burning hundreds of thousands on clipping and failing
Monoculture vs. summary content: Project Hail Mary/The Pit/Game of Thrones getting teaser trailers and fan cams to drive viewership, Netflix shows getting summaries because people won't spend 6-10 hours, and fan cams originally from fans trying to save shows
Proving you're human: Gen Z assumes everything is AI, showing behind-the-scenes proves it's real, and why that's worth money in 2025
Jason's AMC Instagram Reels event: Rented out movie theater for $3K, 100+ people showed up including big influencers and investors, watched reels for an hour, biggest surprise was everyone booing when they realized something was an ad
Stop hosting dinners: Tech bros don't even eat (half are on Ozempic), Jason hosted ping pong event and bug horror stories for Halloween, and why the bank everyone copies is burning more cash per month than Jason has in his account
Platform-specific creators: Twitter discovering social media managers, writing-first platforms (Twitter/LinkedIn) vs. video-first (Instagram/TikTok/YouTube), Jason's team split with Jovian on Instagram/YouTube and another on Twitter/LinkedIn
Social media manager vs. creator: Morning Brew's in-house writers doing skits, journalists joining in-house teams but bringing their audience (CNBC example), and why they're freer as non-employees
Timestamps
00:00 Geese psyop and manufactured virality
15:00 Brand fan accounts and in-house influencers
28:00 Clipping economy and when it works
40:00 Jason's AMC Instagram Reels event
52:00 Platform-specific creators and trial reels
Guest: Jason Levin – Founder of Memelord Technologies, raised $3M to make memes, hit 100K ARR in 9 months with zero ad spend (@IAmJasonLevin on Twitter)



