Prime Video hosts Obsessed Fest to promote YA titles
Prime Video held its first Obsessed Fest to promote upcoming YA titles like *Elle* and *Off Campus*, signaling its push into book-based romances and coming-of-age stories to compete with rivals like N
Prime Video just held its first Obsessed Fest in Los Angeles, gathering fans for a lineup of upcoming young-adult titles like โElle,โ โOff Campusโ and
Read Full Story at Deadline Hollywood โWhy This Matters
Prime Videoโs Obsessed Fest marks a strategic pivot toward leveraging Amazonโs vast book ecosystem to dominate the lucrative young adult romance and coming-of-age genres, where fan-driven franchises like *Heartstopper* and *Shadow and Bone* have proven audiences are hungry for serialized, book-based content. By centering a live fan event around adaptations like *Elle* and *Every Year After*, the platform isnโt just selling showsโitโs selling a lifestyle, tapping into the same cultural cachet that made BookTok a marketing juggernaut.
Background Context
Amazonโs push into YA adaptations comes at a time when traditional Hollywood studios are increasingly reliant on pre-existing IP, but Prime Videoโs advantage lies in its ownership of Audible and Goodreads, giving it an unparalleled pipeline to scout and greenlight adaptations before competitors even see the trend. The rise of TikTokโs BookTok community has also created a direct-to-consumer demand for adaptations that prioritize emotional intensity and romantic tropes, a gap Prime Video is now explicitly targeting with events like Obsessed Fest.
What Happens Next
Expect a surge in YA book-to-screen deals from Prime Video as it ramps up production to feed its expanding library of romance and coming-of-age titles, while rivals like Netflix and Hulu will likely respond with their own fan-centric events or hybrid digital/IRL campaigns. The success of Obsessed Fest could also accelerate Amazonโs plans to integrate Audible audiobooks and Kindle Unlimited excerpts directly into Prime Videoโs interface, blurring the lines between reading and watching in a way that locks in subscriber loyalty.
Bigger Picture
This marks a broader industry shift where streamers are no longer just competing for viewershipโtheyโre competing for *cultural ownership* of genres, with YA romance becoming the next frontier after the saturation of superhero and fantasy franchises. The intersection of book fandom, fan conventions, and streaming platforms is also normalizing hybrid digital-physical events, setting a new standard for how studios engage with niche but hyper-engaged audiences.

