The real story is not that YouTube beat Disney. It is that media now scales through a different model.
The clean headline is easy to write: by one analyst estimate, YouTube generated $62.3 billion of revenue in 2025, slightly ahead of Disney’s media businesses at $60.9 billion. That is a striking comparison on its own. But the deeper point is not that YouTube passed one legacy giant on one revenue lens. The deeper point is that the company now sitting at the center of global media does not really behave like a traditional media company at all. It behaves more like a platform that organizes global content supply, captures demand across devices, and monetizes attention through multiple layers at once.
Alphabet itself has now confirmed the broad outline of that story. In its latest annual results, management said YouTube’s 2025 revenue across advertising and subscriptions surpassed $60 billion. That number matters not just because it is large, but because of what sits underneath it. This is not a business built primarily on commissioning expensive content upfront and hoping the audience shows up. It is a business built on creator supply, recommendation systems, advertising infrastructure, subscription bundles, and increasingly television-scale consumption. That difference changes almost everything: cost structure, balance-sheet pressure, growth durability, and the kind of moat investors should be looking for.
That is why it is no longer enough to compare YouTube only with Disney. The better comparison is YouTube versus the legacy media model itself — and Disney, Warner Bros. Discovery, and Paramount each show a different version of what that model now looks like under pressure. Disney remains the strongest and most diversified incumbent. Warner shows what happens when streaming progress collides with linear erosion and leverage. Paramount shows how difficult the transition becomes when scale is more limited. YouTube, by contrast, sits outside that whole bind. It is not trying to rebuild itself while its old cash engine shrinks. It is scaling inside the new system already.

What YouTube has actually become
It is still common to hear YouTube described in legacy categories: video platform, social video app, creator-economy asset. Those labels are not wrong, but they are no longer sufficient. The business now looks closer to a global media operating system.
Alphabet said YouTube’s 2025 revenue across ads and subscriptions surpassed $60 billion. YouTube Music and Premium reached 125 million subscribers including trials in early 2025. TV has surpassed mobile as the primary device for YouTube viewing in the United States by watch time, and Nielsen said YouTube represented 12.4% of audiences’ time spent watching television in April 2025, its largest TV share to date. YouTube is no longer just a mobile attention product. It is now a scaled, living-room media platform with both ad and subscription economics.
That change in device mix is more important than it may look at first glance. A mobile-first product can still be dismissed as fragmented, casual, or ad-only. A television product is different. It competes more directly for brand budgets, household viewing time, sports attention, podcast listening, and lean-back entertainment. Once YouTube becomes a TV surface, the old distinction between “platform video” and “television” starts to collapse. That is one reason the legacy media comparison is no longer rhetorical. The overlap is now operational.
There is also a deeper structural point. Traditional media companies usually scale by increasing content investment, managing windows, defending affiliate economics, and extracting value from intellectual property across multiple channels. YouTube scales differently. It does not need to pre-fund most of its content supply. Its creators do that themselves, because the platform already aggregates the audience, distribution, monetization, and feedback loop. That means YouTube’s content engine refreshes constantly without requiring the same capital commitment that defines the studio model. This is not simply a bigger media company. It is a media company with a fundamentally different production function.
Why the business model scales differently from legacy media
The strongest part of the YouTube thesis is not the top line. It is the shape of the model.
A studio or network group must decide what to make, spend heavily to make it, market it, distribute it, and then hope the monetization windows justify the investment. YouTube starts from the other end. It owns the demand funnel first. Creators supply the inventory. Advertisers and subscribers monetize it. The recommendation engine allocates attention. The platform sits in the middle and compounds as both sides deepen their participation.
That matters because media has historically been constrained by content scarcity. A handful of studios, a handful of channels, a handful of release windows. YouTube replaces that scarcity with abundance — but not chaotic abundance. The algorithm turns supply abundance into organized consumption. YouTube said in 2026 that more than 20 million videos are uploaded daily and that it has paid over $100 billion to creators, artists, and media companies over the last four years. The moat is not only audience size. It is the ability to coordinate a self-refreshing global content ecosystem at industrial scale.
The subscription layer makes the model even stronger. One of the easiest mistakes is to think of YouTube as mainly ad-driven with some incremental subscription optionality. That framing is stale. Alphabet explicitly said YouTube crossed $60 billion of annual revenue across ads and subscriptions. Since ad revenue for 2025 was roughly in the low-$40 billion range on reported quarters, the remaining layer is no longer trivial. It points to a business that has already built a meaningful recurring-revenue base on top of its advertising machine. That makes YouTube both more resilient than pure ad businesses and more flexible than legacy media groups that must subsidize streaming while their linear economics deteriorate.
This is what legacy media still struggles to solve. They are trying to migrate the audience from one monetization system to another while carrying the content cost burden across both. YouTube does not have to solve that same problem. It was born inside the new system.

Disney: still the strongest legacy benchmark, but a very different machine
Disney is the most important incumbent to compare against because it is still the best version of the legacy media model. It has elite intellectual property, strong franchises, multiple monetization channels, global consumer recognition, and crucially, a business mix that extends beyond pure media.
Disney generated $94.4 billion of total revenue in fiscal 2025 and $17.6 billion of total segment operating income. Its entertainment segment produced $4.7 billion of full-year operating income, while Experiences produced a record $10.0 billion. Disney ended fiscal 2025 with 196 million Disney+ and Hulu subscriptions combined.
Those numbers matter because they show two things at once. First, Disney remains a real operating power. This is not a collapse story. Second, Disney’s resilience is not being driven by media alone. The park and experiences engine is doing a huge amount of work in the total company picture. That is not a criticism. It is part of what makes Disney strong. But it does mean the comparison with YouTube needs to be precise. YouTube’s scale in media exists without a parks business, without cruise economics, and without the same capital intensity of physical consumer experiences. Disney is still stronger as a broader diversified entertainment company. YouTube is stronger as a pure media platform model.
This is the key distinction investors often blur. Disney owns premium IP and monetizes it extremely well across multiple surfaces. YouTube owns the demand surface itself and lets the supply side continuously refill. One model is built around ownership and curation. The other is built around coordination and compounding participation. Disney’s model can still be wonderful. It is just heavier. It requires more deliberate capital allocation, more content commitment, and more careful management of transitions between old and new forms of monetization. YouTube’s model is lighter, more dynamic, and in some ways more ruthless economically because so much of the content risk is externalized.
Warner Bros. Discovery: the clearest example of legacy drag
Warner Bros. Discovery may be the most instructive comparison because its financials show the central problem of the legacy transition in plain view.
WBD reported $37.3 billion of revenue in 2025. It ended the year with 131.6 million streaming subscribers. Full-year Streaming Adjusted EBITDA was $1.37 billion, but Global Linear Networks Adjusted EBITDA was $6.41 billion, down from $8.15 billion the year before. Global Linear Networks advertising revenue fell to $6.33 billion in 2025 from $7.31 billion in 2024.
That is the problem in one set of numbers. The future business is improving. The old business is still larger, but it is shrinking. Streaming is real and getting better. Linear is still profitable, but it is deteriorating. The company is therefore caught in a transition where the growth engine is not yet large enough to fully replace the earnings power of the declining engine. That creates a very different investment profile from YouTube.
YouTube does not carry this same kind of legacy drag. It is not trying to migrate households from a cable bundle into an in-house streaming stack while preserving affiliate revenue long enough to fund the transition. It is not managing a dual system in which the old channel economics still matter but weaken every year. WBD is doing all of that. The contrast is not just between two companies. It is between two economic architectures — one trying to escape a declining distribution model, and one built natively on algorithmic distribution from the start.
This is also why WBD is such an important counterexample for anyone tempted to think scale alone solves the problem. WBD has major franchises, globally recognized brands, and real streaming momentum. But the balance sheet, the legacy network exposure, and the timing mismatch between shrinking linear cash flows and growing streaming profitability all weigh on the story. YouTube’s advantage is not just bigger reach. It is the absence of that structural transition burden.
Paramount: the scale problem becomes more visible
Paramount is a different case, but in some ways an even clearer one. Disney has diversification. WBD has a larger franchise base and a bigger global brand footprint in premium scripted entertainment. Paramount shows what the transition looks like when the company has fewer buffers.
Paramount said its Direct-to-Consumer revenue in Q3 2025 rose 17% year over year, driven by a 24% increase in Paramount+ revenue, which accounted for more than 80% of the DTC business. Management said DTC was expected to be profitable in 2025 and more profitable in 2026. It guided to $30 billion of revenue in 2026, which it said would represent roughly 4% growth versus the midpoint of its 2025 forecast, while also warning that strong DTC growth would be partly offset by continued declines in TV Media affiliate and advertising revenue. Paramount Skydance ended the quarter with $3.3 billion in cash and $13.6 billion of gross debt.
Again, the pattern is familiar. Streaming is progressing. Management is trying to accelerate the direct-to-consumer model. But the legacy TV business is still under pressure, and the company remains in an investment-heavy transition. Paramount’s own guidance effectively says so: DTC is the growth priority, but linear advertising and affiliate revenue remain headwinds. That is the legacy model talking to you directly.
The comparison with YouTube is sharpest here. Paramount has to spend aggressively to build and differentiate a subscription platform while dealing with shrinking linear economics and a tighter margin of error on scale. YouTube already has scale, already has the audience, already has the monetization rails, and only then layers in subscriptions, TV, sports, podcasts, and creator tools. Legacy media is trying to fund the platform transition from inside the old media structure; YouTube is monetizing the new structure directly.

Why this matters for Google, not just YouTube
This is where the investment case gets more interesting.
YouTube is often discussed as one business line inside Alphabet. That is too narrow. Search remains the core earnings engine, but YouTube increasingly looks like Alphabet’s second great consumer surface — one that is global, deeply habitual, multi-format, and not easily reducible to the same concerns investors have about AI changing search behavior.
Alphabet said YouTube’s annual revenue surpassed $60 billion in 2025 across ads and subscriptions. Management also said YouTube remained the number one streamer in the U.S. for nearly three years, according to Nielsen, while TV had become the primary device for YouTube viewing in the U.S. by watch time.
The portfolio effect inside Alphabet matters. Search monetizes intent. YouTube monetizes attention. Search is still the cleaner direct-response business. YouTube gives Alphabet a huge additional layer in brand advertising, creator-led commerce, living-room consumption, subscription revenue, and increasingly creator tooling enhanced by AI. The more media becomes platform-shaped, the more strategic YouTube becomes inside Google.
There is also a subtle defensive angle here. A lot of discussion around Alphabet now centers on whether AI interfaces eventually change the economics of search. That debate will continue. But YouTube sits in a different lane. It is not just a retrieval surface. It is a media ecosystem with proprietary creator relationships, viewing behavior, ad tools, subscriptions, and TV penetration. Even if the market wants to debate Google’s future through the search lens, YouTube strengthens the case that Alphabet is broader than “search plus optionality.” It already owns one of the most important media platforms in the world.
What recent developments changed
The interesting thing about the last year is that recent developments did not really create the YouTube thesis. They made it harder to ignore.
YouTube’s 2025 annual revenue crossed $60 billion across ads and subscriptions. YouTube Music and Premium reached 125 million subscribers including trials. TV overtook mobile as the primary device for YouTube viewing in the U.S., and Nielsen data showed YouTube leading all media companies in television viewing share in April 2025. Legacy companies continued to report the same underlying transition pattern — improving streaming economics alongside persistent pressure in linear advertising and affiliate revenue.
That combination changed the framing. This is no longer a story about whether YouTube is “real media.” It is a story about whether the market has fully internalized that the most scalable media model may now be one that owns distribution, recommendation, and monetization rather than one that primarily owns the content budget. That does not make premium IP irrelevant. Disney proves it is still extremely valuable. It does mean that premium IP is no longer the only route to media scale, and perhaps not even the highest-return route in all cases.
What could break the thesis
The risks are real, and they are not cosmetic.
One risk is regulatory. A platform that controls so much discovery, monetization, and attention will always invite scrutiny. Another is creator economics. If creators begin to believe the monetization mix, revenue share, or discovery system is no longer attractive, the supply engine weakens at the margin. A third is that YouTube’s expansion into more premium surfaces — TV, sports, subscription bundles — could gradually expose it to some of the same cost pressures legacy media has dealt with for years. The strongest version of the YouTube model is still the one where it remains a platform with selective premium layers, not a platform that slowly turns itself into a traditional programmer.
There is also a strategic risk in the comparison itself. It is easy to overstate YouTube’s victory if the benchmark is defined too narrowly. Disney is more than media. It has parks, consumer products, and world-class franchises. WBD and Paramount still own valuable IP and premium libraries. So the right conclusion is not “legacy media no longer matters.” The right conclusion is that the economics of scale in media have changed, and the companies built for the old model have to carry more baggage during that transition than the companies built natively for the new one.
Market Reaction
One analyst estimate now values YouTube at roughly $500 billion to $560 billion as a standalone business. The same framing argues that YouTube’s revenue in 2025 moved ahead of Disney’s media revenue on a comparable basis. The market is increasingly willing to think of YouTube not as an ancillary ad property inside Alphabet, but as a premium platform asset that deserves to be evaluated against the largest names in media rather than against narrower digital-video comps.
The signal underneath that is important. Investors appear more willing to reward businesses that sit on the demand surface and aggregate monetization across formats than businesses still working through the painful migration from linear distribution to streaming. That does not mean every platform asset deserves a premium or every legacy company deserves a discount. It does mean the burden of proof has shifted. Legacy media now has to explain how the transition funds itself. Platform media has to explain how durable its ecosystem is. Right now, the second question looks like the easier one.
Positioning
At this point, the most rational framing is probably high-quality asset, but the real opportunity is in understanding the business model shift rather than just the headline comparison.
If someone looks at this story only through “YouTube beat Disney,” they will miss most of what matters. The more useful framing is that YouTube may be the clearest proof that media can now scale without the same content-balance-sheet burden that defines the legacy model. Disney still deserves respect because it remains the strongest incumbent and has exceptional non-media support from Experiences. WBD deserves attention because it shows the transition pain in its clearest form. Paramount matters because it reveals how hard the transition becomes when scale is more constrained. But YouTube is the one that sits outside the trap entirely.
For Alphabet, that matters a lot. The company is still primarily discussed through search, cloud, and AI capex. Yet YouTube increasingly looks like one of its most strategically important assets: a global media platform, a subscription platform, a TV platform, and a creator ecosystem all at once. The asymmetry here is not simply that YouTube is big. It is that it may still be underappreciated as a distinct economic model inside Alphabet.
Final synthesis
What did recent developments change? Mostly the clarity of the thesis.
The strongest version of the argument is no longer that YouTube became a very large video business. It is that YouTube has become a different kind of media company — one built less like a studio and more like infrastructure. It coordinates supply rather than mainly financing it. It monetizes across ads and subscriptions rather than relying on one system. It increasingly owns the living room without having started there. And unlike Disney, Warner, and Paramount, it is not trying to drag a shrinking linear model into a streaming future while keeping the economics intact.
That does not mean legacy media disappears. Disney in particular remains an extraordinary company. But it does mean the economic center of media has moved. The next great media giant may not be the company with the best franchise library or the deepest studio history. It may be the company that best controls demand, discovery, creator supply, and monetization across devices. In that world, YouTube is not just larger than many legacy peers. It may represent the model that legacy media has been trying, with mixed success, to become.



