NEW YORK — Author-vloggers Hank and John Green often end their popular ''Crash Course'' videos with a donation appeal to keep the YouTube show ''free for everyone forever.'' The multihyphenate brothers now hope they've figured out a way to do just that — by changing their production studio's tax status.
Their educational media company Complexly, which has garnered billions of views through web series that explain just about every classroom subject from animal biology to Latin American literature, will now operate as a nonprofit.
The change is intended to ensure viewers have access to engaging, fact-based content that can compete free of advertisers' interests in the attention economy. It comes as artificial intelligence gives rise to absurdist '' brain rot '' and distorted deepfake images while public media struggles to make ends meet amid sudden cuts in federal funding.
''Part of what Complexly's trying to do is create good information on the internet,'' Hank told the Associated Press. ''Let's actually just say that this is our goal. Like, our goal isn't to build a big company and sell it someday.''
''There's never been more information and yet there's never been less information that you feel you can trust," John added. "Our goal at Complexly has always been to make trustworthy content. And making Complexly a public good, for me, is the next step in that process.''
Strong audience and philanthropic support
Nonprofit status has been a consideration for several years, according to Complexly CEO Julie Walsh Smith.
The studio already receives sizable philanthropic funding — including $4.8 million last year. The nonprofit's initial supporters are led by existing partners such as YouTube, PBS, and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. Other funders such as Arizona State University and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute underwrite a number of ''Crash Course'' projects.