Signal & Noise

The Negotiated Future: Ethan Settel on Newton Research, Agentic Media Buying, and the Reinvention of Media Operations

56 min · 4. juni 2026
episode The Negotiated Future: Ethan Settel on Newton Research, Agentic Media Buying, and the Reinvention of Media Operations cover

Description

What happens when AI stops assisting media teams and starts acting on their behalf? In this episode of Signal & Noise, we sit down with Ethan Settel, Head of Sales & Accounts at Newton Research, to explore one of the most important developments in advertising today: the emergence of agentic media buying. While much of the industry remains focused on AI tools that summarize dashboards, generate briefs, or automate reporting, Newton Research is pursuing something far more ambitious. The company is building specialized AI agents that can connect data, execute advanced analytics, build forecasting models, recommend optimizations, and increasingly interact directly with media platforms to support planning, buying, and activation.  At the center of our conversation is a provocative thesis: the future of advertising may be negotiated by machines. Rather than relying on human teams to manually interpret reports, adjust budgets, and coordinate across dozens of disconnected systems, agentic platforms like Newton are creating teams of AI specialists that can work together to analyze campaign performance, simulate scenarios, and execute media decisions with unprecedented speed and precision. These agents can communicate with DSPs, publishers, clean rooms, and planning tools, transforming what has historically been a fragmented and labor-intensive process into an increasingly automated operating model.  We also discuss Newton’s groundbreaking work with NBCUniversal, FreeWheel, Yahoo, and Locality, where buy-side and sell-side AI agents collaborated to support premium video buying across linear television and streaming. The initiative offers a compelling glimpse into a future where software agents negotiate inventory directly with one another, potentially reshaping the role of DSPs, SSPs, and other intermediaries throughout the advertising ecosystem.  Along the way, Ethan explains why measurement and analytics are the foundation of any effective agentic system. Without trusted data, consistent models, and full transparency into how decisions are made, automation simply amplifies errors. Newton addresses this by combining its proprietary marketing science knowledge base with each client’s unique methodologies, creating a repeatable and highly customized intelligence layer that becomes more valuable over time.  We also explore some of the biggest questions facing the industry: * How AI agents differ from generic tools like OpenAI ChatGPT, Anthropic Claude, and Google Gemini * Why data normalization has historically consumed most of a data scientist’s time * How agentic systems can democratize advanced analytics for planners and buyers * The role of protocols such as MCP and AdCP in enabling agent-to-agent communication * Whether DSPs and SSPs become strategic platforms or simply “dumb pipes” * Where liability and accountability sit when AI begins making media decisions * Why human oversight remains essential, even as automation accelerates Ethan also shares his perspective on the organizational impact of agentic AI. Rather than replacing media professionals outright, he argues that the technology frees analysts, planners, and buyers from repetitive manual work, allowing them to focus on strategy, experimentation, and innovation. The result is not fewer insights, but potentially unlimited analytics applied to every campaign and every decision.  This conversation offers a rare and highly practical look at what applied AI actually looks like inside advertising. It moves beyond hype to examine how real systems are being deployed today to transform measurement, planning, and activation. If Ethan is right, the future of media will not be defined by faster reporting or prettier dashboards. It will be defined by intelligent agents negotiating with one another across the buy-side and sell-side, continuously optimizing outcomes in a market that becomes more automated, transparent, and data-driven than ever before. The negotiated future has already begun.

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the Signal & Noise community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

48 episodes

episode SIGNAL BREAK: Tejas Manohar, Co-CEO of HighTouch Talks LiveRamp Data Purchase Proposition (from Publicis) artwork

SIGNAL BREAK: Tejas Manohar, Co-CEO of HighTouch Talks LiveRamp Data Purchase Proposition (from Publicis)

For weeks, reports that Publicis was exploring a relationship with Hightouch following its acquisition of LiveRamp circulated as an industry scoop. Until now, no one involved had publicly confirmed it. In this special Signal & Noise Signal Break, we sit down with Hightouch co-founder and CEO Tejas Manohar, who confirms that Hightouch has in fact been in discussions with Publicis. That confirmation adds an important new dimension to one of the biggest stories in adtech this year. What would a partnership between Publicis, LiveRamp, and Hightouch mean for identity, activation, clean rooms, and the future architecture of customer data? Rio Longacre, Brett House, and Tejas unpack the implications in a fast-moving, high-energy conversation between three practitioners deeply involved in modern marketing infrastructure. We discuss composable CDPs, warehouse-native activation, agentic workflows, and why the industry's center of gravity may be shifting yet again. To be clear, Hightouch is a sponsor of Signal & Noise, but sponsorship played no role in our interest in covering this story or inviting Tejas to join us. This discussion was driven entirely by the significance of the news and our belief that it deserves broader industry attention. This isn't the long-form Tejas episode we originally planned. That's still coming. Consider this an early dispatch—a Signal Break—to share an important confirmation with the market while it's still unfolding. Topics discussed: • Tejas confirms Hightouch has spoken with Publicis • What a Publicis–LiveRamp–Hightouch relationship could look like • Why composable architectures continue gaining momentum • How identity, activation, and measurement may evolve post-acquisition • The growing role of AI and agentic systems in marketing operations If you're trying to understand where the future marketing operating system is headed, this is one conversation you won't want to miss.

Yesterday40 min
episode Can DSPs Save Publishers? Keith Petri and Rich Hyden on Viant Publisher Solutions, Identity, and the Future of Monetization artwork

Can DSPs Save Publishers? Keith Petri and Rich Hyden on Viant Publisher Solutions, Identity, and the Future of Monetization

Signal & Noise Exclusive Publishers create the content. Publishers build the audiences. Publishers bear the costs. Yet somehow, after two decades of digital advertising innovation, many publishers capture only a fraction of the value they create. In this Signal & Noise exclusive, Rio Longacre and Brett House sit down with Keith Petri, SVP of Data, Identity & Supply at Viant, and Rich Hyden, SVP of Publisher Solutions at Viant, for a deep discussion on one of the most important questions facing the open internet: Can publishers reclaim their economic future—or are the economics of digital media fundamentally broken? This conversation coincides with Viant's major announcement of Viant Publisher Solutions, a new suite of capabilities designed to improve transparency, signal quality, monetization, identity activation, and supply-path efficiency for publishers while simultaneously improving advertiser outcomes. It represents one of the most significant publisher-focused initiatives launched by a major DSP in recent years. But this episode goes far beyond a product launch. Together, Keith and Rich unpack the realities of modern publisher monetization, the hidden inefficiencies inside today's programmatic supply chain, why signal quality increasingly determines revenue, and how identity has become one of the most valuable assets publishers possess. The discussion explores how technologies such as SupplyIQ, Direct Access, Household ID, and IRIS_ID aim to create a more direct relationship between buyers and sellers while reducing friction, duplication, and information loss throughout the advertising ecosystem. Along the way, the conversation tackles some of the biggest debates in advertising today: * Why premium publishers continue to struggle despite creating enormous value * Whether supply-path optimization helps publishers—or hurts them * The role of identity in driving publisher revenue * Why signal quality may be the new currency of digital advertising * How CTV is reshaping publisher economics * The growing power of walled gardens versus the open internet * Why contextual intelligence is becoming increasingly important * How AI and agentic media buying may transform programmatic advertising * Whether DSPs can play a meaningful role in helping publishers thrive * What the future of publisher monetization looks like over the next decade Keith and Rich also share a fascinating perspective from inside one of the industry's most innovative DSPs, explaining why better advertiser outcomes and healthier publisher economics may no longer be competing objectives. For anyone working in digital media, ad tech, publishing, identity, programmatic advertising, retail media, CTV, measurement, or AI-powered marketing, this is a conversation packed with practical insights and big-picture thinking. The future of the open internet may depend on whether buyers and sellers can become more aligned. This episode explores what that future could look like. Guests * Keith Petri, SVP Data, Identity & Supply, Viant * Rich Hyden, SVP Publisher Solutions, Viant Hosted By * Rio Longacre * Brett House Topics Covered Publisher Monetization • Programmatic Advertising • Supply Path Optimization (SPO) • CTV • Identity Resolution • First-Party Data • Household ID • Contextual Targeting • Publisher Data Strategy • AI Advertising • Agentic Media Buying • Open Internet Economics • Ad Tech Infrastructure • Signal Quality • Media Quality • Digital Advertising #SignalAndNoise #AdTech #ProgrammaticAdvertising #Viant #PublisherMonetization #CTV #IdentityResolution #DigitalAdvertising #RetailMedia #AIAdvertising #OpenInternet #MarketingTechnology Enjoy!

18. juni 20261 h 2 min
episode Life After AdTech: What Happens When You Stop Optimizing Clicks and Start Building Aircraft? artwork

Life After AdTech: What Happens When You Stop Optimizing Clicks and Start Building Aircraft?

What happens when an early Amazon engineer who helped pioneer automated advertising leaves AdTech behind to build the world's fastest commercial airliner? In this episode of Signal & Noise, Brett House and Rio Longacre sit down with Blake Scholl, Founder and CEO of Boom Supersonic [https://boomsupersonic.com/?utm_source=chatgpt.com], for a wide-ranging conversation about innovation, entrepreneurship, aviation, AI, and why some of the world's biggest opportunities are hiding in plain sight. Before launching Boom, Blake helped shape early internet advertising at Amazon, worked through the hypergrowth years at Groupon, and experienced firsthand the rise of AdTech, recommendation engines, and large-scale customer acquisition systems. Then he made an unlikely leap: leaving software behind to tackle one of the hardest problems in engineering—bringing commercial supersonic flight back from the dead.  The discussion explores what Blake learned from Amazon, why he believes Groupon missed a once-in-a-generation opportunity, and how short-term thinking can destroy even the most promising companies. Along the way, he shares stories about crashing Google AdWords, building the world's largest spam operation at Groupon, and getting some of his toughest lessons directly from Jeff Bezos.  The conversation then shifts to Boom Supersonic's mission, the history of the Concorde, the regulatory decisions that stalled aviation innovation for decades, and Blake's controversial view that technological progress didn't slow because the problems became harder—it slowed because society stopped pursuing them.  Blake also reveals the behind-the-scenes story of Boom's near-collapse, the seven-year pursuit of a partnership with Rolls-Royce, and how a failed engine deal ultimately led to one of the company's biggest breakthroughs: building its own propulsion technology and creating a new turbine business that may help fund the future of supersonic travel.  The episode closes with Blake's thoughts on AI, entrepreneurship, and why the biggest impact of AI may not be job replacement—but the creation of millions of new builders capable of turning ideas into reality.  * Blake Scholl's journey from Amazon and Groupon to Boom Supersonic * Early AdTech, automated advertising, and internet growth stories * Lessons from Jeff Bezos and Amazon's long-term thinking culture * Groupon's rise, fall, and missed platform opportunity * Why innovation in aviation stalled after Concorde * Regulatory capture and the history of supersonic flight * Building Boom Supersonic from scratch * The failed Rolls-Royce partnership and Boom's engine strategy * Turbine power generation, AI infrastructure, and data centers * The future of commercial supersonic travel * Why AI may create more entrepreneurs than ever before * Long-term thinking, risk-taking, and building hard-tech companies Whether you're interested in aviation, startups, AI, AdTech, or the future of innovation itself, this is a fascinating conversation about what happens when someone decides to stop optimizing digital systems and start building physical ones. #SignalAndNoise #BoomSupersonic #BlakeScholl #Aviation #SupersonicFlight #AI #Entrepreneurship #Innovation #Amazon #Groupon #AdTech #MarTech #HardTech #Technology #FutureOfWork #CommercialAviation #ArtificialIntelligence #StartupLeadership #Engineering #DigitalTransformation

15. juni 202657 min
episode Ads in AI: Karsten Weide on Advertising, Agentic Commerce, and the Future of AI Monetization artwork

Ads in AI: Karsten Weide on Advertising, Agentic Commerce, and the Future of AI Monetization

What happens when the technology that powers advertising becomes the thing consumers interact with directly? In this episode of Signal & Noise, Rio Longacre and Brett House sit down with industry analyst Karsten Weide to explore one of the most important—and controversial—questions facing the digital economy: how AI will ultimately make money. From advertising inside chatbots to agentic commerce, autonomous media buying, and the future of the open web, Karsten shares why he believes AI will reshape advertising more profoundly than any technology shift he has witnessed in more than three decades covering media, technology, and digital advertising.  The conversation examines the rapid emergence of agentic AI across the advertising ecosystem, the growing role of automation in media planning and optimization, and why the traditional programmatic supply chain may be heading toward a fundamental transformation. Karsten explains how platforms, DSPs, SSPs, publishers, agencies, and brands are all racing to build their own agentic operating systems—and what that means for the future structure of the advertising market.  The discussion also tackles one of the industry's most debated topics: advertising inside AI products. Will OpenAI, Google, Anthropic, and Perplexity eventually embrace advertising as a major revenue stream? What will AI-native ad formats actually look like? And can advertising coexist with the trust users expect from conversational interfaces?  The conversation then turns to agentic commerce—the emerging world where AI agents shop, compare products, negotiate prices, and make purchases on behalf of consumers. If agents become the primary buyers, what happens to search advertising, performance marketing, and the broader digital advertising ecosystem? Karsten offers a provocative perspective on why this future may create a surprising renaissance for brand advertising, display, video, audio, and out-of-home media.  Along the way, the group discusses: * Why AI adoption in advertising is still in its earliest stages * The rise of autonomous media buying and agentic workflows * How Amazon, Google, Meta, and emerging ad tech players are approaching AI-powered advertising * The future of SMB advertising and self-service media buying * The battle between open standards and proprietary AI ecosystems * Why the programmatic supply chain may look dramatically different in five years * The opportunities and risks of AI-driven creative production * Whether AGI is actually closer than most people think * How AI could reshape agency operating models and industry employment If you've been wondering how advertising, commerce, media buying, and consumer behavior evolve in a world increasingly shaped by AI agents, this episode provides one of the most thoughtful and grounded discussions available today. The future of advertising may not be humans buying from brands. It may be agents buying from agents. And the implications are enormous.

11. juni 20261 h 10 min
episode News, Trust, & Polarization: Vanessa Otero on the Fragmented Media Era artwork

News, Trust, & Polarization: Vanessa Otero on the Fragmented Media Era

What happens when a society can no longer agree on basic facts? In this episode of Signal & Noise, Rio Longacre and Brett House sit down with Vanessa Otero, Founder and CEO of Ad Fontes Media and creator of the influential Media Bias Chart, to explore the growing crisis of trust, polarization, and information quality in the modern media landscape. Vanessa's Media Bias Chart began as a personal project during the 2016 election cycle and has since evolved into one of the most widely recognized frameworks for evaluating media bias and reliability. Today, Ad Fontes Media has analyzed tens of thousands of articles, podcasts, and news sources to help consumers, educators, advertisers, and publishers better understand the fragmented information ecosystem.  The conversation explores how the industry arrived at a moment where millions of people consume different versions of reality, why social media algorithms amplify outrage and identity over truth, and whether objective journalism is still possible in an era dominated by platforms, creators, and AI-generated content. Vanessa shares her perspective on the collapse of trust in institutions, the economics of journalism, and why the survival of high-quality reporting matters far beyond the news business itself.  The discussion also dives into the business challenges facing journalism. As local newspapers disappear, digital advertising consolidates around a handful of technology platforms, and AI reshapes content discovery, many news orgs are struggling to sustain the costly work of original reporting. Vanessa explains why journalism functions as critical societal infrastructure, how advertising incentives have unintentionally weakened the news ecosystem, and why she believes advertisers have a role to play in preserving high-quality information.  Rio and Brett challenge Vanessa on whether audiences actually want objective reporting, the role of algorithms in reinforcing worldviews, and whether we're witnessing a return to a more fragmented media environment reminiscent of the pre-broadcast era. Together they explore the tension between engagement and truth, the rise of podcasts and creator-driven media, and whether consumers are becoming more aware of the ways technology influences their perception of reality.  The episode also examines the future of advertising against news content. Vanessa discusses Ad Fontes Media's work helping advertisers identify high-quality news environments, the importance of context and trust in media buying, and why she believes many brands have made a mistake by avoiding news altogether. The conversation touches on CTV, media quality signals, brand safety, and the emerging role of AI in both improving and undermining the information ecosystem.  Whether you're a marketer, publisher, journalist, technologist, policymaker, or simply someone trying to make sense of today's media environment, this conversation offers a thoughtful and nuanced look at one of the most important challenges facing modern society. * The origin story of the Media Bias Chart * Why people increasingly live in separate realities * Trust, misinformation, and disinformation * The collapse of local journalism * Social media, algorithms, and outrage economics * Why advertisers stopped buying news * The business model crisis facing publishers * AI-generated content and the future of journalism * Podcasts, creators, and media fragmentation * News quality, media trust, and brand safety * CTV advertising and Ad Fontes Media's partnership with Viant * Whether objective journalism is still possible Vanessa Otero is the Founder and CEO of Ad Fontes Media, the company behind the Media Bias Chart. A former patent attorney, Vanessa launched the chart during the 2016 election cycle to help people better understand media bias and reliability. Today, Ad Fontes Media provides media quality ratings used by advertisers, publishers, educators, researchers, and consumers seeking greater transparency in the information ecosystem.

8. juni 20261 h 24 min