A week after Cannes Lions wrapped, most of the industry is back at their desks and the dust has settled enough to see what actually mattered versus what was just noise on the Croisette. A few years ago, creator activations at Cannes lived on a hot rooftop two floors from wherever the actual festival was happening. This year, they had the ground floor: the Palais Beach, running lunches and headlining activations from Google/YouTube Beach to nearly every brand cabana on the strip.
More than 250 creators showed up across official festival programming this year, the most in Cannes Lions history. LIONS Creators, the dedicated track run in partnership with Adobe, moved out of that side venue and into the main festival footprint.
That’s the visible story. Underneath it, three things happened in the same week that matter more than the photo ops.
The platforms are rebuilding around creator content
Amazon used its yacht at Cannes to launch Fire TV Creator Hub, a new section of the Fire TV interface that surfaces YouTube and TikTok video and podcasts, built around 120-plus creators at launch and a target of 500 by 2027. In the same week, Instagram confirmed it’s testing a widescreen mode built for televisions and experimenting with longer, episodic formats.
Put those two next to each other and the picture is odd and clarifying at once. A connected-TV product is trying to behave like a social feed. A social feed is trying to behave like a TV product. The distinction between a streamer, a social platform and a connected-TV interface is dissolving, and every platform racing toward that blur is competing for the same thing: creator output. More screens competing for your content is not a threat to creators. It’s demand.
Brand deals started acting like media deals
Creator-brand partnerships stopped being pitched as a cheaper alternative to a TV buy this year and started being budgeted like one. Meta said partnership ads, which let brands turn creator content directly into paid media, hit a $10 billion revenue run rate in the first quarter of 2026, more than double the year before. Marketplaces built to originate more of these deals multiplied around Cannes: LinkedIn launched its first Creator Marketplace on June 10, Meta merged its own marketplace with its partnership ads hub, and TikTok rolled out custom creator networks so brands can build curated pools of talent to brief directly.
None of that is a brand testing a new channel. It’s brands building permanent infrastructure to buy creator content at scale, with the same rigor they’d apply to any other line of the media plan.
Institutional capital showed up to buy, not sponsor
The clearest evidence that Cannes 2026 was a pricing event, not a marketing event, came from two deals that had nothing to do with a stage or a party. On June 8, Accenture agreed to acquire creator agency Whalar into Accenture Song, a deal Whalar’s own leadership called the largest creator economy transaction to date. Two days earlier, CAA and TPG’s Integrated Media Company formed Compound Creative Holdings, a $250 million vehicle built to acquire and operate creator-led media businesses coming out of YouTube, TikTok, Instagram, Spotify and Substack.
Neither deal needed a Croisette backdrop. Both landed the week of Cannes anyway. That’s a consulting giant and a private equity firm deciding creator businesses are worth owning outright, not just partnering with.
The industry still doesn’t fully trust the tools it’s celebrating
Award entries at Cannes Lions 2026 fell 25% year over year, down to about 20,050 from 26,900, after the festival introduced stricter Awards Integrity Standards following last year’s scandal over agencies faking results with AI. The same week the industry threw its biggest-ever party for AI creative tools, it was also enforcing new rules built to stop AI from lying to it.
A similar tension showed up in where creator content is allowed to live. Jay Shetty’s video podcast goes exclusive to Netflix and Spotify in a deal worth up to $100 million, ending full-episode uploads to YouTube. Not every creator is taking that trade. The platforms want exclusivity. Plenty of creators still want reach.
The bottom line
I’ve spent years building creator businesses from the operator’s side, and I’ve never seen a Cannes where the money matched the hype the way it did this year.


