The YouTube documentary landscape has undergone a seismic shift with the rapid rise of Fern, a channel that reached four million subscribers in just over two years without ever revealing a single creator’s face.
Founded by anonymous creators known only as Jonas and David, the Amsterdam-based operation has scaled from a two-person student project into a 60-person global media empire.
The channel’s success recently caught the attention of Electrify Video Partners, a London-based private equity firm, which acquired a majority stake in the business in early 2025.
Electrify Video Partners, co-founded by former Disney and KKR executives Ian Shepherd and Owen Maher, specializes in scaling established YouTube creators into diversified media brands.
The firm, which manages a portfolio including popular science channel Veritasium and Simple History, reportedly acquired between 50% and 80% of the company behind Fern and its German-language predecessor, Simplicissimus.
While the specific financial terms were not disclosed, Electrify has raised over $135 million to invest in what it calls high-quality, “key person risk”- mitigated assets and channels where the brand is built on content quality rather than a specific influencer’s personality.
The rise of Fern is rooted in a decade of production evolution that began with Simplicissimus, a German-language channel focused on analytical video essays.
Jonas and David initially operated under Funk, a digital content network funded by German public broadcasters ARD and ZDF, which provided them with institutional legitimacy and resources.
After moving to independence in 2022, they partnered with a Dutch creator known as Hoog to launch Fern for an international audience. The channel’s signature style involves complex 3D animations and spatial reconstructions built in Blender to explain intricate geopolitical and social events.
This high-production approach has allowed Fern to achieve growth rates rarely seen in the documentary niche, moving from one million to four million subscribers between April 2024 and October 2025.
Their most-watched upload, a 3D mapping of an attempted assassination of a U.S. political figure, garnered over 19 million views by prioritizing factual clarity over editorial commentary.
This commitment to journalism led to the team being nominated for the German Television Award (Deutscher Fernsehpreis), effectively bridging the gap between digital content and traditional broadcast standards.
Despite the influx of private equity capital, the founders have maintained a strict policy of anonymity to avoid the pitfalls of parasocial relationships (one-sided emotional bonds viewers form with media personalities).
By operating behind the brand name rather than their own identities, Jonas and David have insulated the business from personal controversies while focusing resources on their dual-language production pipeline.
This model allows them to repurpose expensive 3D assets for both German and English markets, maximizing their return on investment (the ratio of profit made relative to the cost of production).
The acquisition by Electrify Video Partners marks a maturing of the creator economy in Europe, as investment firms increasingly treat YouTube channels as viable infrastructure assets rather than mere hobbyist outlets.
While some fans expressed concerns regarding editorial independence, the founders maintain that the partnership allows their 60-person team, spanning researchers, 3D artists, and editors, to focus entirely on content.
As of early 2026, Fern remains a dominant force in the “armchair documentary” genre, proving that high-brow investigative journalism can find a massive, profitable audience on social media.