VRideo Calls It A Day
I came across this post in Variety today. It’s disconcerting; I’m saddened to hear it. I met these guys–sharp, amicable fellows–more than a year ago at VRLA, and was impressed by their platform. More recently, this past August, our affiliate manager reached out to them, and we sat down and had a Skype call about the viability of promoting our VR porn site BaDoinkVR.
I explained plainly: “I understand your hesitance (and I do). However, we can come up with a solution that will not risk tarnishing your brand, and it will provide you with some much-needed cash.”
Though reticent, they expressed interest, and said they would get back in touch with us. It was a productive conversation. I was actually optimistic, but nothing came of it. And now they’re gone.
As I said, I get it, but it is vexing to know–and I acknowledge there were likely nuances I’m not privy to, and I’m also being reductive–that facing an existential crisis, companies would rather die than consider aligning themselves with a perfectly legal, above-board, well-respected company in the adult entertainment space.
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[…] I hope this means a company like Wevr is more likely to survive these lean, early times, and that it foreshadows positive for 2017. Until the advertising dollars begin rolling in, stories like this are the ones we should rally around. It offsets bummers, like VRideo’s recent collapse. […]