Kevin Hart’s Hartbeat Expands LOL Network Into Vertical Comedy
HARTBEAT’s LOL Network is moving into vertical comedy with a slate of original IP, positioning the company to define a category that has seen rapid growth in the microdrama format but remains dominated by melodrama and romance.
The microdrama category is crowded with hundreds of apps competing for the same audience, with industry analysts reporting that as much as 90% of platform spend goes to marketing and user acquisition rather than content. Customer acquisition has become the category’s defining cost problem. HARTBEAT’s LOL Network is positioned to absorb that cost structure entirely. With more than 13 million existing social followers, over 500 million vertical views generated in 2025, and 6.8 billion minutes already streamed across thirteen CTV and FAST platforms, LOL Network doesn’t need to acquire an audience. The audience is already watching comedy in vertical on LOL’s platforms every day.
“Let’s call it what it is. Vertical is the business, and microdrama is just one genre inside it,” said Jeff Clanagan, President and Chief Distribution Officer at HARTBEAT. “Right now that genre is stacked with the same billionaire-CEO, secret-marriage, mafia-romance cliffhangers running on repeat. Comedy is the open lane, and we’ve been operating in it at scale for a decade. The audience, the talent, and the distribution are already here. We’re not entering vertical. We’re expanding what we’ve already built.”
Freshman 15 anchors the slate, a series of fifteen 15-minute stand-up specials spotlighting the next generation of digitally native comedic talent. It debuts later this year as a LOL Network first-window exclusive.
“The microdrama category has proven that vertical storytelling is a real business,” Clanagan continued. “What it hasn’t proven yet is that the genre monoculture we’re seeing today is what audiences will still be watching five years from now. Every dominant format eventually opens up. Comedy is where vertical opens up first.”
HARTBEAT’s LOL Network is partnering with Artists First and Kids at Play on the slate. Artists First, the talent management and production company behind comedic voices including Anthony Anderson, Awkwafina, Niecy Nash, Rob Riggle, and Ronny Chieng, brings its creator-first development pipeline and represents two of vertical’s top directors, Danny Farber and Kristen Brancaccio. Kids at Play, the award-winning production studio known for high-volume, platform-native content across YouTube, Snap, and TikTok, brings digital-first production capability. The three companies have collaborated previously, including on the Die Hart franchise and the 2024 Paramount/Comedy Central film Cursed Friends.
“We are excited about this opportunity with Hartbeat and Kids at Play. We have deep experience producing high-quality programming across micro-budget and independent formats, and look forward to bringing that experience into the vertical space,” said Peter Principato, Chairman of Artists First.
Luke Kelly-Clyne, Head of Studio at HARTBEAT, added: “This slate is designed to expand what comedy can be in vertical format. We’re working with a new generation of comedic creators who understand the audience, and with legacy comedic voices whose work deserves to reach that audience in the format it’s already watching. The goal is to build programming that surprises, that feels built for this moment, and that continues the work HARTBEAT has been doing in comedy for years.”
Amy Laslett, President of Kids at Play, said: “We’ve been creating content in the vertical space for a long time so combining our content and digital production expertise with partners who have proven track records across all distribution channels is very exciting. We’ve got a deep slate, great talent and massive distribution.”
Additional projects from the slate will be announced in the coming months.