The Future of Creator Conventions

Together with:

CREATOR NEWSLETTER


I just got back from the second annual Open Sauce. It’s a convention dedicated to engineers, mechanics, hack smiths, and the YouTubers that inspire them.

Started last year by YouTuber William Osman as a way place to give creatives a place to shine, this year, the space was double the size and twice as chaotic. The event took place at the Cow Palace in San Francisco, which normally hosts rodeos. But this was a different type of shit show.

Open Sauce had a lot of the usual aspects of an influencer convention. Con staples like overpriced food, merchandise, and the occasional cosplayer in a furry mask were unavoidable. Creators like Mark Rober, Adam Savage, and the Backyard Scientist hosted panels and discussions on two stages. They packed each room with discussions about video games, their favorite projects, and the future of space exploration.

But what really set Open Sauce apart from VidCons or TwitchCons was the massive selection of creators showing off their booths. 500 individuals got space in four exhibition halls to show off whatever they could possibly imagine. There was a self-moving table, and a real-life Flappy Bird that you could control by flapping your arms.

Open Sauce was as weird as it sounds. Messy, unorganized, and hilarious — just like the rest of the convention. Read more about it below.


CULTURE

Open Sauce is the Future of Creator Conventions

open sauce

Ready to sell digital products, without selling out?

On Teachable, you can funnel your expertise and passions into online courses, downloads, community, and more. Plus, sell those products confidently with built-in payments and ecommerce tools.


IN THE BIZ


PLATFORMS

TikTok Is Generating Scarily Realistic AI Avatars of Creators for Ads

TikTok is taking AI influencers to a whole other level.

By Charlotte Colombo, Passionfruit Contributor


LABOR

AI Detection Is Going Terribly, Thanks For Asking

Is AI detection software untrustworthy?

By Charlotte Colombo, Passionfruit Contributor


JOB BOARD


YOUTUBE MADE ME DO IT

Tune in to the Reactorverse Podcast for an exclusive interview with reaction compilation legend Johnny O’Dell, aka J2O, where he talks about his creative process and offers unique insights into the ever-evolving reaction space. 

Be sure to subscribe to the Passionfruit YouTube channel so you don’t miss an episode. If you’d like to see episodes early, join us on Patreon!

Content for Creators.

News, tips, and tricks delivered to your inbox twice a week.

Newsletter Signup

Latest Newsletters

  • 🍂‘Christian Girl Autumn’ Creator Speaks Out

    🍂‘Christian Girl Autumn’ Creator Speaks Out

    CREATOR ECONOMY NEWSLETTER Issue #82 | Nov. 15, 2022 There’s nothing worse than working hard on a funny tweet, dance, song, recipe, video, or joke and having it stolen. On the internet, it’s easy to steal, borrow, or ride off the success of others’ ideas without facing any consequences. And despite creators often preaching “authenticity”…

  • 👸Creator Trolls Elon Musk

    👸Creator Trolls Elon Musk

    CREATOR ECONOMY NEWSLETTER Together with: Issue #82 | Nov. 10, 2022 Elon Musk’s Twitter takeover has been certainly been tumultuous. Less than two weeks into his executive reign, users are abandoning the platform, advertisers are pausing their Twitter campaigns, employees are being laid off or resigning, and creator Hank Green tweeted Musk “has no idea…

  • 🍼TikTok’s Doll Collector Controversy

    🍼TikTok’s Doll Collector Controversy

    CREATOR ECONOMY NEWSLETTER Issue #81 | Nov. 8, 2022 Niche subcultures thrive on TikTok. Cannamoms, furries, adult age regressors, and more use the platform to find community and destigmatize their unique interests. However, the platform can breed hate against many marginalized creators who make it to the “wrong side of TikTok.” This week, Passionfruit contributor…