Author:Wall Street CN
Just weeks after announcing its focus on "core products" and shutting down its video generation app, OpenAI acquired a tech industry online talk show, further deepening market doubts about its strategic discipline.
OpenAI announced the acquisition of TBPN, an online programming company that aims to rival Bloomberg and CNBC, focusing on real-time analysis of technology news and executive interviews. Terms of the transaction were not disclosed. According to an internal memo from Fidji Simo, CEO of OpenAI's Applications division,This acquisition aims to "promote a constructive dialogue surrounding AI transformation."TBPN will be placed under Chief Global Affairs Officer Chris Lehane to assist the company's communications and marketing efforts outside of the program.
OpenAI also pledged that TBPN would maintain editorial independence, retaining full control over program content, guest selection, and production arrangements. However, promises of independence after acquisitions have historically been tested—in 2024, employees of CoinDesk, a news website owned by the cryptocurrency exchange, publicly accused the parent company of ordering the removal of reports.
This acquisition comes just days after OpenAI completed the largest funding round in Silicon Valley history, and also closely follows the company's announcement that it will focus its resources on programming tools and the enterprise market, and shut down its Sora video generation application. This contrast between streamlining its product line and venturing into media content reflects the ongoing tension between OpenAI's expansionist ambitions and its focused approach.
"Friendly Media" of Silicon Valley Elites
TBPN was founded in October 2024 and began offering three hours of live streaming every weekday starting in March 2025, positioning itself as a platform for real-time technology news analysis.Despite averaging around 70,000 viewers per episode, limiting its audience, the show is highly popular among Silicon Valley executives—its content is generally considered more supportive of the tech industry than mainstream media. Meta's Mark Zuckerberg, Microsoft's Satya Nadella, and OpenAI's Sam Altman have all appeared as guests.
The 11-person company claims to be profitable, with advertising revenue of approximately $5 million in 2025 and projected to exceed $30 million in 2026. The show's co-founders and hosts, John Coogan and Jordi Hays, previously delivered advertisements in a radio-anchor style, wearing racing jackets emblazoned with sponsor logos. Last September, they hired former Postmates executive Dylan Abruscato as Director of Business Partnerships. Following OpenAI's acquisition, TBPN will discontinue its existing advertising business, fundamentally transforming its business model.
Is it about disseminating assets or expanding into non-core businesses?
In his memo, Fidji Simo wrote that he was impressed by TBPN's brand marketing and industry insights, and that its communication and marketing creativity "truly impressed me." As arranged, the TBPN team will assist OpenAI with its external communications and marketing efforts outside of the program, but will retain full editorial control over the program itself.
Although John Coogan and Jordi Hays had previously stated publicly that the company was not founded for fundraising or sale, Dylan Abruscato said that the prospect of expanding the show's audience and improving production capabilities ultimately convinced the team. Jordi Hays stated in a press release:
"It is crucial for us to shift from commentary to truly influencing the global dissemination and understanding of this technology."
Whether TBPN's editorial independence can truly be maintained in the face of its new owner's commercial interests, and whether the change in ownership will affect the willingness of OpenAI's competitors to participate in the program, remains to be seen.
The credibility of the strategic focus commitment is questionable.
according toWall Street News previously reportedIn March of this year, at an all-hands meeting, Fidji Simo foreshadowed a major strategic shift for OpenAI: a complete scaling back of its multi-pronged approach, concentrating core resources on programming tools and the enterprise market. He also directly characterized the strong rise of competitor Anthropic in the enterprise AI field as a "warning signal" for OpenAI. The company subsequently shut down the Sora video generation application, and reports indicate that previously high-profile product lines such as the Atlas browser and ChatGPT e-commerce functionality will also be downgraded in priority.
Against this backdrop, the acquisition of TBPN sends a complex signal. OpenAI has also recently faced other image pressures: Anthropic ran ads during this year's Super Bowl attacking OpenAI's testing of advertising features in ChatGPT, which Sam Altman called "funny but misleading"; Altman also admitted last month that the company's cooperation agreement with the U.S. Department of Defense "looked opportunistic and hasty." With its strategic focus narrative still unresolved, this move into media content may further complicate investors' assessment of OpenAI's strategic clarity.











