Rick Beato is pivoting away from celebrity interviews — and his 56 million recent views might be exactly why he's ready for a change.
The Interview Saturation Problem
Beato has accumulated roughly 15 to 18 interview videos, representing the bulk of his recent output. While he acknowledges these conversations have value, he believes the format has become overwhelming. "There's just been too much, way too much of it," he admitted, describing how the constant travel and three-hour editing sessions leave him unable to focus on content he's genuinely passionate about.
The logistics exhaust him: coordinating flights, managing multiple camera setups, syncing audio, and spending three days away from his studio. Rather than chasing big-name artists like Paul McCartney or Jimmy Page — interviews he now considers unlikely — he wants to return to what originally built his channel.
What Made This Channel Great
Beato longs for the earlier days of his YouTube presence, when he focused on music theory, recording engineering, and film scoring. He describes making videos where he learned and improved as a musician, practicing through the content itself. "I want to make more content about song breakdowns," he said. "Not what makes the song great, but just song breakdowns."
He also wants to bring in audio engineers to work on production projects at his studio — a return to educational content rather than celebrity promotion. He plans to continue hosting studio interviews for those who reach out, but is actively limiting new travel commitments.
The Album Project
For the past four months, Beato has been working on his own band's record, pouring most of his spare time into making music. This represents a shift toward creating rather than just interviewing — and it may signal where he wants to take the channel next year.
The Numbers Don't Tell the Whole Story
In late November, Beato's channel hit 56 million views in 30 days — the most in his channel's history, surpassing even Joe Rogan's numbers. Yet this apparent success came with a caveat: he doesn't want to feel like he's drowning under three-hour video edits while traveling.
"It's not that I don't like to interview people. It's great, but there's just been too much, way too much of it."
A kick drum video he released was taken down because, in his view, it lacked purpose: "I didn't feel it was good enough, that it didn't have a point to it." He describes the experience as a video "in search of a point."
Counterpoints
Critics might note that Beato's nostalgia for educational content ignores what his audience clearly wants — interviews with famous musicians drive views and engagement. His 56 million views suggest the interview format works, and pivoting could lose momentum at a time when his channel is thriving. Additionally, his claim of being "too tired" to travel seems more like privilege than exhaustion, given that most creators would jump at the opportunity to interview major artists.
Bottom Line
Rick Beato's core argument — that he's over-interviewed and ready to return to educational content — is genuine and well-articulated. His biggest vulnerability: the timing feels off. After a record-breaking view month, announcing burnout from interviews reads less like strategic pivoting and more like someone who hasn't figured out what he actually wants. The tension between his success and his dissatisfaction is unresolved, and that might be exactly where his next video should go.