The Daily Wire spent a decade building its identity around a simple promise. Legacy media had become bloated, ideologically captive, and incapable of telling the truth, and a leaner conservative outlet would replace it. On May 1, 2026, that outlet handed pink slips to a significant share of its own newsroom and production teams, with former host Candace Owens claiming on X that more than half the staff was let go. Editor-in-chief Brent Scher pushed back hard, calling the 50 percent figure “insane” and “nowhere near” accurate. The company itself confirmed only that the cuts spanned “a number of teams” and were concentrated at its Nashville production hub.
The exact percentage is contested. The trajectory is not. This is the second major round of layoffs in 13 months. Bentkey, the children’s streaming service launched as a conservative alternative to Disney, was shuttered in 2025 with its entire staff cut. Co-founder Jeremy Boreing stepped down as co-CEO in early 2025. Independent industry tracker layoffhedge.com estimates the cumulative workforce reduction at more than 60 percent in just over a year, and Boreing has since launched a solo podcast outside the company he helped build into a billion-dollar brand.
None of this happened in a vacuum. The financial pressure has been visible for those willing to look, and the audience numbers tell a story that no spokesperson statement can paper over.
The Numbers Don’t Lie
Ben Shapiro built The Daily Wire’s audience on YouTube. He is now watching it leave. Channel analytics tracked by independent observers show monthly views down roughly 85 percent from their late 2023 peak of more than 170 million, settling somewhere between 18 and 26 million in early 2026. Subscriber counts have dropped by tens of thousands during certain stretches. The flagship voice of the outlet has lost the equivalent of a major network’s nightly audience, and that loss is reflected directly on the balance sheet.
Subscription growth slowed. Ad rates softened. Production costs kept climbing. Multiple reports indicated the company quietly retained bankruptcy counsel last year as the math stopped working. The billion-dollar valuation Boreing helped engineer in 2024 now looks less like proof of arrival and more like a high-water mark from a different media moment.
Hollywood Killed the Newsroom
The Daily Wire’s identity crisis did not start with the layoffs. It started when the company decided it wanted to be a studio. Boreing’s vision pulled the outlet into expensive entertainment ventures, including The Pendragon Cycle, an ambitious Arthurian fantasy series of the kind that has bankrupted larger studios than this one. Bentkey was supposed to compete with Disney. Daily Wire+ was supposed to compete with streaming giants. The e-commerce arm, with its razors and chocolates and cigars, was supposed to monetize loyalty into recurring revenue.
Some of it worked. Matt Walsh’s Am I Racist? was the top-grossing documentary of 2024. Most of it consumed more cash than it produced. Running a newsroom and a film studio and a children’s entertainment platform and a private-label consumer goods company simultaneously requires either limitless capital or extraordinary discipline. The company appears to have run short of both. When Boreing departed, he reportedly negotiated his way out over a “shift in priorities,” which is a polite way to describe the moment when the creative empire stops paying for itself.
The Talent Exodus
The most telling indicator of an institution’s health is whether its talent leaves and thrives or leaves and fades. The Daily Wire has been remarkably consistent on this question, and the answer has not been kind to its executives. Candace Owens, fired in 2024, has built a larger audience on her own than she ever commanded inside the company. Brett Cooper, who quit in late 2024 after a public dispute with Boreing over her replacement on her own show, is doing the same on YouTube. Boreing himself, the architect of the brand, is now producing independent content under his own name.
That is not a coincidence. It is a market signal. When the people who built your platform consistently outperform you after they leave, the audience is telling you that they followed the voice, not the logo. The Daily Wire spent years assuming the reverse, and the YouTube charts now show what that assumption costs.
Becoming What They Mocked
There is a particular kind of irony in watching an outlet that built its brand attacking legacy media for being bloated, top-heavy, and ideologically captured, then run the exact same playbook in miniature. The Daily Wire chased prestige projects beyond its means. It centralized power around a small executive class. It treated dissenting talent as a liability rather than an asset. It hired bankruptcy counsel while telling subscribers everything was fine. The corporate behavior is indistinguishable from the legacy outlets it once delighted in mocking.
The conservative audience did not disappear. It migrated. Substacks, independent podcasts, X accounts with no payroll and no overhead are eating institutional brands across the political spectrum. The audience went looking for the unfiltered voices that Daily Wire-style outlets used to provide before they started worrying about valuations and Hollywood deals. The market has rendered its judgment, and the judgment was rendered by people clicking elsewhere.
The Apostle Paul wrote, “Be not deceived; God is not mocked: for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.” The principle applies to institutions as readily as to individuals. The Daily Wire sowed an empire of expensive ambitions, internal purges, and the assumption that brand loyalty would survive any executive decision. It is now reaping a leaner organization, a fragmented audience, and a workforce reduction that the company itself will not fully quantify.
Conservative media is not dying. It is being rebuilt outside the institutions that thought they owned it. Those institutions can either rediscover the discipline that made them worth following, or they can keep trimming staff while wondering where the audience went. The Daily Wire’s next year will tell which path it has chosen, but the layoff notices that went out on May 1 suggest the choice has already been narrowed considerably.


