Magzter Gold (Sitewide AU)
Forbes (Digital)

Forbes (Digital)

1 Issue, December 2024/January 2025

Talk Ain't Cheap

Talk Ain't Cheap
It's 9 p.m. in Los Angeles' Peacock Theatre when five performers take the stage. Eminem's "Shake That" blasts from the speakers, and the male dancers start to tear off their clothes. As they strip down to their last layer, an energized Alexandra Cooper appears behind them in her signature pink sweat set.
"Welcome to the Unwell Tour!" Cooper, 30, shouts to the 5,000 screaming young women who have packed the house.
After the burlesque show, Cooper talks about growing up in Newtown, Pennsylvania, playing Division I soccer at Boston University and her rollercoaster sex life. Multiple dance numbers and outfit changes later, pop star Camila Cabello and comedian Heather McMahan join her for onstage interviews before a performance by "Man Eater" singer Nelly Furtado closes out the show.
It's the seventh and final date of Cooper's personal revue, based on her hit podcast, Call Her Daddy, which regularly attracts more than 13.5 million monthly listeners. The live shows are a celebratory end to Cooper's massive year: In August, she signed a $125 million three-year deal with SiriusXM to bring her Unwell Network of five podcasts to the 34 million subscriberstrong radio giant. Unwell is a branch of Cooper's self-described "Gen Z media company," Trending, which she cofounded in April 2023 with her film producer husband, Matt Kaplan. In addition to Call Her Daddy, Unwell also oversees other popular influencer-hosted shows such as Hot Mess with Alix Earle (an estimated 1 million monthly listeners) and Pretty Lonesome with Madeline Argy (an estimated 330,000). Both Earle and Argy, like Cooper, are Forbes 30 Under 30 alumnae.
Her ambitions for Trending are unbounded: live events, scripted and unscripted shows, podcasts, tours and commerce. The company is young, but the SiriusXM deal gives it a nice cash cushion. "We look for audio talent that is interesting, powerful, has a point of view and has a social media following that can amplify what they're doing on the air," says Scott Greenstein, president of SiriusXM.
They've employed this tactic before. In 2006, Sirius paid $500 million over five years to Howard Stern. It was an expensive but effective move: Sirius subscriptions increased from fewer than 1.5 million in March 2005 to more than 4 million just a year later-due at least partly to Stern. Sirius revenue jumped too, up 193% year over year to $125 million in the first quarter of 2006. With Cooper, Sirius is betting big that its 20-year-old playbook works in the age of smartphones and streamers like Spotify and YouTube.
Prior to signing with SiriusXM, Cooper had a $60 million, three-year deal with streaming titan Spotify. But it was time to move on. "The brand had only grown since being at Spotify," Cooper says. "I knew the money would be there. The deal was more about what other things people can give Call Her Daddy and Unwell that will help us grow."
Grown she has. In 2018, Cooper was heartbroken and unemployed, recording a podcast with her then-roommate, Sofia Franklyn, from their NYC apartment. The pair dished on their dating lives as single 20-somethings and quickly gained a community of loyal young female fans who called themselves the "Daddy Gang."
The show caught the attention of David Portnoy, the charismatic and controversial founder of Barstool Sports, a digital media outfit aimed at sports-obsessed young men. It was an instant hit, generating 2 million downloads in its first two months. Cooper then took it to Spotify in ...
You're reading a preview of
Forbes (Digital) - 1 Issue, December 2024/January 2025

DiscountMags is a licensed distributor (not a publisher) of the above content and Publication through Magzter Inc. Accordingly, we have no editorial control over the Publications. Any opinions, advice, statements, services, offers or other information or content expressed or made available by third parties, including those made in Publications offered on our website, are those of the respective author(s) or publisher(s) and not of DiscountMags. DiscountMags does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness, truthfulness, or usefulness of all or any portion of any publication or any services or offers made by third parties, nor will we be liable for any loss or damage caused by your reliance on information contained in any Publication, or your use of services offered, or your acceptance of any offers made through the Service or the Publications. For content removal requests, please contact Magzter.

© 1999 – 2025 DiscountMags.com All rights reserved.