The big story in entertainment right now is creators going Hollywood. The bigger story is mainstream talent quietly going the other way.

Curry Barker , the trending 26-year-old YouTuber who shot Obsession for $750,000. The horror film has already done $75 million worldwide. A24 has already handed Barker the new Texas Chain Saw Massacre.

In a few days A24 is releasing Backrooms, the debut of 20-year-old YouTuber Kane Parsons , which is tracking to open above $25 million. If it lands at number one, Parsons will become the youngest director ever to top the domestic box office.

The Talent Migrating In Opposite Directions

Mainstream stars are doing the same thing in reverse, and almost nobody is paying attention.

KJ Apa , an actor known for a leading role in Riverdale, is in the middle of one of the year’s wildest creator-economy stunts. A viral TikTok musician called Mr. Fantasy, who somehow has Apa’s exact tattoos, hit 1 million followers in months. Apa swears it’s not him. He released a video this month accusing Mr. Fantasy of stealing his image. Last week he was photographed having dinner in West Hollywood with a guy who looked exactly like Mr. Fantasy. The denial is the bit and the bit is the engagement.

Matt Rife took the standup pipeline that produced every comedy star of the last 30 years and bolted a content strategy onto it, turning TikTok virality into a stadium tour.

Gabriella Lester , is no different. A touring magician, a Magic Castle headliner, and a Penn & Teller Fool Us alum, she joined the four Horsemen of Lionsgate's Now You See Me LIVE for its 2025 Sydney Opera House premiere. Her social channels alone are now pulling roughly 100 million views a month.

"There is simply no show or venue in the world that could generate those kinds of numbers," she says. "Even if I performed every single day in the biggest theaters in the world, it still wouldn't be possible."

That isn't traditional reach. It is exactly the asset the rest of mainstream entertainment is quietly trying to build.

What Each Talent Is Actually Chasing

This isn't the same story, it's two different groups chasing two different things in opposite directions.

Creators want what Hollywood has spent 100 years engineering. They want institutional legitimacy, distribution, and the brand premiums of prestige formats. Mainstream talent however wants what creators have quietly built. It wants a direct line to an audience that doesn't require a network, a budget, or a production company.

The crossover isn't easy in either direction. Josh Zimmerman, dubbed the 'Creator Coach,' is the first ICF-certified life coach focused exclusively on creators. For the last nine years he has worked with both superstar YouTubers and traditional entertainment celebrities, which makes him one of the only people watching both sides of this migration from the same chair.

"Your audience is loyal to you, but how you show up for them is completely different depending on the platform," he says. "And that's the part nobody prepares for."

He sees the same pattern from both sides of the room. Creators crossing into traditional formats hand over the control, the voice, and the vision that built them, distributed across rooms full of people who each own a piece of what they used to own entirely. Mainstream talent moving the other way has to figure out who they are on camera with no script and no character to hide behind. That's a craft they've never been trained in.

The ones who make either move work, he says, stop trying to transfer what worked before and build something new on new terms. "I built something that worked, I worked incredibly hard to get here, and now I'm starting from zero," is what he hears from both sides, behind closed doors. "Most people aren't ready for how humbling it actually is."

What This Means For Creators And Hollywood

For agencies negotiating both sides, the deal mechanics are changing fast.

A few years ago, a creator going traditional took a discount to wear the prestige badge. Today, that discount is shrinking. A mainstream actor launching a creator alias used to be a vanity side project. Now it factors into how brands price their endorsement deals. The surcharge for talent who can deliver both broadcast credibility and direct social reach is real.

The career that emerges from all this doesn’t have a clean industry name yet. Creator, Influencer, Actor or something new? But right now it’s a touring magician with 100 million monthly views, it’s a 26-year-old YouTuber being handed a horror franchise and it's an established actor pretending to be a TikTok pop star.

The fence between Hollywood and the creator economy was useful for a long time, until both sides started climbing over it at the same time.