MrBeast Style is Out: Top YouTube Editor Reveals the 5 Video Formats Taking Over in 2026

Premier video editor HillierSmith predicts the end of algorithmic "slop." Discover the 5 creators—from Michelle Khare to Sheehan Quirke—who are setting the ambitious trends for 2026.

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Hayden Hillier-Smith, the premier video editor and creator economy commentator known for cutting videos for Logan Paul and MrBeast, has declared the death of “content slop.”

In his latest forecast, Hillier-Smith argues that 2026 will be defined by a massive shift away from dopamine-hacking retention tactics and toward high-budget, cinematic, and deeply human storytelling.

He highlights five specific creators who are breaking the algorithm’s unwritten rules and proving that audiences are starving for art, not just “content.”

The era of hyper-optimised, retention-obsessed content may finally be collapsing under its own weight.

Hillier-Smith’s analysis centres on a rejection of the “soulless” optimisation that has plagued the platform for the last five years. He points to five key examples that signal this shift.

1. Hollywood Stakes

The first major shift is the return of “Hollywood Stakes,” exemplified by creator Michelle Khare. While the current “meta” often relies on CGI thumbnails and safe, studio-based challenges, Khare’s recent recreation of the Mission: Impossible plane stunt brings genuine danger back to the screen.

Hillier-Smith notes that Khare physically hanging from a moving aircraft offers a level of visceral reality that over-produced “content” simply cannot match.

2. The Anti-Retention Edit

The second trend is the “Anti-Retention Edit,” which directly challenges the fast-paced editing style popularised by MrBeast.

Hillier-Smith points to a video by creator Tas, titled “I think we should break up,” which opens with a single, unbroken shot lasting over 30 seconds.

Conventional wisdom suggests this would kill viewer retention, but the emotional authenticity hooks the audience more effectively than rapid-fire cuts ever could.

3. The Independent Documentary

The third format taking over is the “Independent Premium Documentary.” The creators of Listers, a birdwatching documentary, turned down distribution deals from streaming giants like Netflix to keep their film on YouTube.

Hillier-Smith highlights that 70% of their audience watched the film on television screens, proving that YouTube is evolving from a mobile distraction into a legitimate living-room cinema experience.

4. Narrative Television

The fourth evolution is the move from vlogging to “Narrative Television.” The channel Dana and the Wolf has abandoned the “storytime” vlog format in favour of a scripted, episodic series about their polyamorous relationship.

This structure mimics the addictive nature of prestige TV shows, encouraging viewers to tune in habitually for the plot rather than just the personality.

5. Intellectual Video Essay

The final and perhaps most surprising trend is the “Intellectual Video Essay.” Hillier-Smith cites newcomer Sheehan Quirke, whose debut video critiquing modern architecture amassed millions of views.

The success of this slow, thoughtful content proves that the modern audience is not “dumb,” but is actually starving for complex, aesthetic, and meaningful commentary that respects their intelligence.

The Editor’s Perspective

Hayden Hillier-Smith is widely regarded as the “editor’s editor” in the creator economy. With nearly 400,000 subscribers on his personal channel, he has built a reputation for deconstructing the editing techniques of top-tier creators.

His prediction aligns with a broader sentiment in the industry: viewers are burnt out on hyper-stimulated content.

By highlighting creators who prioritise “soul” over “stats,” Hillier-Smith is signalling to aspiring creators in India and abroad that the next big opportunity isn’t in copying the top 1%, but in out-creating them with genuine ambition.

HillierSmith’s breakdown of the five videos that signal a shift from “slop content” to high-effort, cinematic storytelling on YouTube.

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