What sets Angel apart is her ability to blur lines without losing the viewer’s trust. In 2025, she launched "The Chemistry Test," a docu-series where she and a rotating cast of partners (including Brad Newman) undergo improv workshops, relationship counseling, and physical chemistry drills before ever filming an intimate scene. The result? Content that feels less like performance and more like a genuine connection. Her mantra, shared in a recent VideoRED podcast: "Desire is a conversation. I just film the dialogue."

Newman’s breakout series this year is "The Morning After," a quiet, 15-minute show that starts right after intimacy. He cooks breakfast, makes coffee, and engages in hushed, vulnerable conversations about expectations, boundaries, and what it means to be seen. Critics have called it "post-coital cinema verité." Fans love its honesty. Lifestyle blogs have praised it for normalizing aftercare as an essential part of modern relationships.

If Angel is the heart of VideoRED 2025 , Brad Newman is its unexpected soul. A former theater actor who pivoted to digital media during the post-pandemic creator boom, Newman brings a brooding, intellectual energy to the platform. His background in Shakespeare and indie film is evident in his approach—he treats every scene as a character study.

As VideoRED moves toward the second half of 2025, Angel and Brad are already teasing a live improv special and a potential podcast, "The Third Space," about friendships that evolve into something more. The platform itself is testing interactive features—allowing viewers to choose dialogue options or camera angles during softer narrative moments.