Inside MicroCo’s Bid to Bring Hollywood Craft and AI Efficiency to the Booming World of Vertical Micro-Dramas
In recent months, the entertainment and advertising worlds have turned a sharp eye toward an emergent storytelling format: what are being called vertical micro-dramas (also known in their Chinese origin as duanju 短剧). These short-form serialized vertical-video series -- typically consumed on mobile phones in brief episodes -- are rapidly moving from niche to mainstream, and promise new monetization avenues for content creators, platforms, and brands. For ad and media professionals across the business spectrum, this trend bears close watching.
What are vertical micro-dramas?
Originating in China, micro-dramas are mobile-native shows built for vertical (9:16) viewing, consisting of minute-long to few-minute episodes, often structured to be highly bingeable and viral. As one industry report put it: “These series typically feature 1-2-minute episodes … produced specifically for smartphone viewing.”
What sets the format apart:
In short, micro-dramas take the “episodic binge” model, compress it, orient it for mobile, and monetize it in novel ways.
Why is there such industry excitement?
From a business standpoint, several forces are converging:
Leading players & strategies
Here are some of the companies’ gaining traction, and how they are positioning themselves.
Crazy Maple Studio / ReelShort
Crazy Maple, backed by China’s COL Group, operates ReelShort, a vertical-drama app introduced in the U.S. in 2022. According to sources, ReelShort uses a “coins” model where users purchase access to unlock episodes. The company claims downloads in the tens of millions and revenue in the hundreds of millions. For example, Wikipedia notes: “In 2025, the app reportedly reached over 370 million downloads and generated US$700 million in revenue.” Their go-to-market: mobile-first distribution, heavily female-skewed romance/soap plots, monetization via in-app purchases, and use of viral hooks.
Holywater / My Drama
Based in Ukraine, Holywater’s My Drama app is an international vertical-series platform. It has embraced AI in script and production, aiming to drive down cost per show (reports say as low as US$20,000). Importantly, in 2025, Fox Entertainment Studios took an equity stake in Holywater and committed to producing more than 200 vertical titles over two years. (Their positioning: global distribution, brand partnerships (e.g., Fox IP adapted into verticals), and leveraging AI/low-cost production for scale.
MicroCo (a joint venture of Cineverse + Banyan Ventures)
Announced August 2025, MicroCo is aimed squarely at bringing the micro-drama format to Hollywood, with ambition to elevate creative standards while retaining the mobile-first rhythm. According to a breakdown: “MicroCo thinks it can do things better… by using AI.” The leadership emphasizes low-cost, high-volume production, targeted marketing on mobile social apps, and avoiding the mistakes of past mobile-only services. Their go-to-market: leverage legacy Hollywood talent but orient for micro-drama’s speed and economics.
MicroCo is structured as a 50/50 joint venture between Cineverse, led by chairman & CEO Chris McGurk, and Banyan Ventures, the firm headed by former ABC Entertainment/WME chair Lloyd Braun. The JV’s brief is to build a U.S. studio and AI-native platform dedicated to vertical micro-series, pairing Cineverse’s streaming stack and audience reach with Braun’s Hollywood network and company-building chops. Jana Winograde (formerly President of Entertainment at Showtime) serves as MicroCo’s co-founder & CEO. Susan Rovner (former chairman, Entertainment Content, NBCUniversal Television & Streaming; ex-Warner Bros. TV) is set to join as chief creative/content officer.
Monetization models & forecasts
Monetization in micro-dramas typically takes one or more of these forms:
From a forecasting view: a recent report calls the format “an US$8 billion business” globally. Another analysis noted that download installs for short-drama apps rose 992% year-on-year in Q1 2024, to 37 million installs.
Lessons of the Quibi failure -- and what’s different this time
It is worth revisiting Quibi’s crash (launched 2020, folded same year) because micro-dramatic pioneers echo many of the same promises -- but with key differences. Quibi raised US$1.75 billion, produced short-form mobile-only content, but critics argued it mis-read behavior, over-spent, and lacked distribution/integration.
Key pitfalls for Quibi included: premium pricing for a mobile-only format, misalignment with user behavior (mobile = often free, social, shareable), and siloed distribution without leveraging existing social-video ecosystems.
MicroCo’s positioning is intentionally post-Quibi: budgets are lean, distribution is mobile-first and algorithm-aware, and the monetization stack is hybrid (in-app unlocks, ad/sponsorship, and licensing), rather than subscription-only. Management has contrasted this approach with prior “walled-garden” attempts, arguing that discovery and social amplification must be built in from day one -- and that AI can lower unit costs while improving targeting and creative ops (asset versioning, audience testing, metadata).
“We’re going to be trying a lot of things others haven’t done -- and we’re going to be very, very focused on discovery,” said Cineverse President & Chief Strategy Officer Erick Opeka, underscoring MicroCo’s emphasis on recommendation and funnel design for vertical series.
Micro-dramas differ from Quibi and other platforms in several important ways:
Still, caution is warranted: as one Chinese CTO candidly observed, “our data indicates that the percentage of people losing money in the industry has increased from 80% last year to 90% this year.”
Pushback & warnings from industry
While enthusiasm is high, several warning flags deserve attention:
Opinion: Why The Myers Report is optimistic
From our vantage point, vertical micro-dramas represent a positive trend for the media ecosystem and for advertisers. Here’s why:
SAG/AFTRA and labor implications: As micro-dramas enter the U.S. mainstream, unions will have to negotiate frameworks for mini-series, residuals, streaming rights. The format’s low cost cannot mean low protection. But the more formalization and scale the format achieves, the more unionized work it can support -- which benefits talent and advertisers alike.
Winners & losers
Final word
In summary, vertical micro-dramas represent a meaningful shift in storytelling economics and audience engagement. The format merges mobile consumption habits with serialized narrative, enabling new monetization levers, brand-integration opportunities, and global scalability. Advertisers, media buyers, studios, and platforms should take this seriously. While risks remain (content fatigue, monetization outside China, union/labor frameworks), the upside is strong. In the months ahead, expect increased investment, strategic partnerships (studios with mobile-drama apps), brand-driven series formats, and AI-enabled production scale. For those willing to think small (but scale fast), micro-dramas could be the next major growth arena in entertainment.
(The Myers Report will continue to track vertical micro-drama developments, including ad-inventory models, brand case studies, view-through metrics, and union/labor implications.)
