Billionaire Brooklyn Nets Owners Launch New Media Company

by Vanst
Billionaire Brooklyn Nets Owners Launch New Media Company

BSE Global, the parent company of the Brooklyn Nets, New York Liberty, and Barclays Center, expanded its growing media portfolio on Tuesday, launching a new publisher called Type.Set.Brooklyn.

According to BSE Global chief product and experiences officer DeJuan Wilson, the outlet, which will launch with a team of around a dozen full-time staff, will be tasked with creating content that defines and capitalizes on Brooklyn’s distinctive brand.

The publisher will focus primarily on video content, launching with a slate of four original series that it will distribute across social media and YouTube, with a website of written content for more in-depth stories. 

“The name comes from the idea of the typesetting moment,” Wilson said. “It’s when something gets stamped with permanence and purpose. Brooklyn does that for culture—it pressure-tests what’s real and passes it on to the world.”

While the publisher declined to share investment details or revenue projections, the new venture will have the benefit of its deep-pocketed backers, the Alibaba cofounder Joe Tsai and his wife Clara Wu Tsai, as well as Julia Koch, the widow of billionaire and conservative megadonor David Koch. 

The outlet will work to operate sustainably on a standalone basis, according to Wilson, but it will function as part of a broader gambit from BSE Global to distill the essence of Brooklyn into a marketable commodity. 

Last year, BSE Global acquired Brooklyn Magazine for an undisclosed price and retooled it into a guide for Brooklyn culture, and it has spent millions as part of a larger effort to enhance the area around the Barclays Center.

A video-first approach

At launch, Type.Set.Brooklyn will lean heavily on short and long-form video, with its content distributed primarily on YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok. 

The website will serve as a deeper home for extended storytelling and supporting text content across verticals like music, food, style, and entrepreneurship.

Public Domain, a weekly series inspired by sampling and freestyle culture, challenges emerging and veteran producers to remake 100-year-old tracks for modern artists. The first episode features Grammy-winning producer Bbearded and rapper Nay Speaks.

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