-
20 votes
-
Spotify is pulling select advertising privileges for white noise podcasts in a bid to boost the audio streaming company's annual profits
34 votes -
Japanese YouTuber sentenced to two years in prison for sharing gameplay and anime videos
16 votes -
Social media decline: Users are shifting to messaging apps and group chats
36 votes -
Here's the plan - a video to the audience from LTT
23 votes -
Linus Tech Tips pauses production as controversy swirls
121 votes -
Twitch will let streamers ban users from watching their streams
15 votes -
Madison Reeve explains why she quit Linus Tech Tips (CW: self harm, slurs, sexual harassment)
167 votes -
Failures in accuracy, ethics and responsibility with Linus Tech Tips and LMG as a whole
163 votes -
AI comes for YouTube’s thumbnail industry
26 votes -
How two brothers turned planespotting into YouTube gold
8 votes -
What's the deal with copyright on Twitch?
So, a friend of mine wants to become a Twitch streamer, commenting over movies. I never used Twitch. He showed me some channels over there that made me confused. There are dozens of channels...
So, a friend of mine wants to become a Twitch streamer, commenting over movies. I never used Twitch. He showed me some channels over there that made me confused. There are dozens of channels entirely dedicated to people providing minimal commentary to entire movies, animes, and TV shows which are displayed in full, although not on full screen. And they seem to be monetized, otherwise why would anyone stream 5 to 10 hours a day? They have ads.
I have a few questions.
First, how is that legal? Why aren't copyright holders taking these channels down? Do people really care about a streamer that mumbles a single uninteresting word every few minutes, or it's all just an excuse to watch movies for free? Why the same content that will get your video taken down on YouTube is apparently okay on Twitch?
18 votes -
Anthony Padilla and Ian Hecox usher in the new era of Smosh
13 votes -
Wendover Productions on Nebula
28 votes -
From fan funding to shopping: More ways for creators to earn on YouTube
4 votes -
What are some Minecraft content creators that you enjoy watching?
Personally, I would recommend Pixlriffs. A few days ago, he has started a new season of his Minecraft Survival Guide series coinciding with the release of Minecraft 1.20. The series goes over each...
Personally, I would recommend Pixlriffs. A few days ago, he has started a new season of his Minecraft Survival Guide series coinciding with the release of Minecraft 1.20. The series goes over each step, including the basic ones, to get yourself started and beyond on a Minecraft world. Here is a direct link to the start of season 3 inside a playlist. If you are a new or returning player to the game, I think it's a very nice resource to get the hang of it.
The channel has been going for quite a few years now so there's a lot of content to watch, including a separate channel that he handles the writing and narration for dedicated to recapping the event of the Hermitcraft multiplayer server. The Hermitcraft players are themselves content creators I'd recommend checking out.
21 votes -
Linus Sebastian is stepping down as CEO of Linus Media Group, Creator Warehouse, and Floatplane
30 votes -
Who are your favourite content creators, and what do they do?
So I've been watching a lot of Youtubers the past year or so, and I'm about to run out of content! So I'm curious what you all are enjoying? I'll start of course - some channels I really like:...
So I've been watching a lot of Youtubers the past year or so, and I'm about to run out of content! So I'm curious what you all are enjoying? I'll start of course - some channels I really like:
Contrapoints - rarely uploads nowadays but makes great videos about social issues, especially trans and queer issues as she is herself lesbian and transgender.
Perun - weekly 1-hour videos consisting of analysis of military economics, primarily about the Ukraine conflict. He also branches out though, and has done great videos on China's military's modernisation, and the German military's procurement processes, to give some examples.
World War Two - you may remember him from The Great War, this is Indy Neidell and co. who goes through the Second World War in chronological order. It is very in depth as they do it week by week, so this is the most thorough documentary on the war available.
Skip Intro - analysis of TV shows, particularly his Copaganda series is very interesting, in which he goes on deep dives of different TV shows' portrayal of police and how, most of the time, this portrayal is very dishonest.
Climate Town - very informative and funny content about the climate crisis. Lots of things impacting the climate that you wouldn't have ever thought of before.
Jenny Nicholson - makes videos about her own interests, fandoms, nerd culture etc. Very funny but rarely uploads.
Edit: Thanks everyone for the recommendations and discussion! Lots of stuff to sift through now, thank you!
26 votes -
How Kurzgesagt cooks propaganda for billionaires
22 votes -
How Freddie Wong built RocketJump to nine million subscribers…and then left Youtube
6 votes -
The business behind Kurzgesagt
11 votes -
My channels were hacked, streamed crypto scams, then deleted last night
12 votes -
Sam Denby on how well negativity works on YouTube
10 votes -
Crushed
7 votes -
How 2019 marked the end of movie nerd YouTube channels
I don’t know how many of you watch “nerd” movie channels, or ever did. But for those of you who don’t know what I’m talking about. I’m talking about stuff like ScreenJunkies, Collider and all...
I don’t know how many of you watch “nerd” movie channels, or ever did. But for those of you who don’t know what I’m talking about. I’m talking about stuff like ScreenJunkies, Collider and all their auxiliaries like SchmoesKnow.
These are the people that were made fun of by RedLetterMedia in their NerdCrew videos which funnily enough they don’t do anymore.
They were pillars of the YouTube film community. In fact, back when I was first getting into movies in the early 2010s, they were the majority of content. Until the video essay boom came into fruition circa 2015, and of which is now the primary style of video.
They would make dozens upon dozens of videos and podcasts talking about the latest trailer for a Marvel movie. They would speculate about what would happen in the next Star Wars movie. They would react to trailers and over-exaggerate. They would fully embrace all things that Funko Pop nerds embraced.
2019 was the height of all of this. The MCU’s Infinity Saga came to a close with Endgame and Spider-Man: Far From Home, and the Star Wars Sequel trilogy wrapped up later in the year with The Rise of Skywalker. The hype for these movies were unbelievable, even if one of them disappointed and left everyone with a bitter after-taste.
Then the pandemic happened and all nerd movie news stopped. There was nothing to react to, there was nothing to hype. Wonder Woman 1984 came out, but nobody liked it.
The following year was a little bit better thanks to the hype machine surrounding Spider-Man: No Way Home. But still, the views that these nerd channels were getting dropped significantly. Check out the difference between the reviews on Fandom Entertainment's channel for Endgame and Spider-Man: No Way Home. The drop in audience is remarkable. And that’s for the big reviews. The day-to-day content that these channels posted are down significantly, and in the case of Fandom Entertainment (of ScreenJunkies), they have stopped producing daily videos. It’s a YouTube channel on life support.
Collider is an empty shell of itself, they canceled all of their nerd panels and only do generic press junket videos.
It’s simple really. These things ended. Interest in the MCU has dipped since Endgame (with the exception of Spider-Man). Star Wars has stopped making movies, and the TV shows have been of mixed quality. People moved on. These channels aren't needed anymore.
The era of the 2010s movie nerd YouTube channel is over. The only ones staying alive are ones that relied more on personality rather than farming content. I’m talking about JeremyJahns, Chris Stuckmann, and Mr. Sunday Movies. Their audience stayed around because their audience liked their personality.
12 votes -
Kurzgesagt and the art of climate greenwashing
7 votes -
YouTube should charge for 4K. Hear me out.
13 votes -
The next chapter for Learning on YouTube
7 votes -
The armchair psychologist who ticked off YouTube
1 vote -
TikTok: Life on the algorithm
4 votes -
How the YouTube creator economy works
8 votes -
Creators are mitigating burnout with longform YouTube videos
8 votes -
‘I am not gonna die on the internet for you!’: How game streaming went from dream job to a burnout nightmare
16 votes -
Hampster Economics - Pondering how a meme from a quarter-century ago might have gone over in today’s much-more-mature creator economy
3 votes -
Youtube screws me over for three years and counting
2 votes -
The Vtuber industry: Corporatization, labor, and kawaii
10 votes -
Why do people watch Rhett & Link? (A theory)
5 votes -
Extremists find a financial lifeline on Twitch
7 votes -
Linus Tech Tips accidentally became a top 1% OnlyFans creator
19 votes -
Twitch will ban users for 'severe misconduct' that occurs away from its site
18 votes -
Mafia fugitive caught after posting cooking show on YouTube
9 votes -
Why popular YouTubers are building their own sites
17 votes -
Twitch star quits GTA RP after in-game jobs become too much like real jobs
12 votes -
Hogwarts Legacy lead designer used to run anti-social justice Youtube channel
14 votes -
YouTubers have to declare ads. Why doesn't anyone else?
24 votes -
YouTube can now place ads on all videos even if creators don’t want them
26 votes -
YouTube Terms of Service updated with the “right to monetize”
26 votes -
What do you think of channels that theorize on video game lore?
Easy example: Game Theory/The Game Theorists.
8 votes -
YouTubers are upscaling the past to 4K. Historians want them to stop
9 votes -
Sometimes, developers find it hard to work with content creators, so here are some tips to help the collaboration along
4 votes