-
30 votes
-
Being a hater and the overexposure paradigm
5 votes -
First of YouTuber Joel Haver's "12 Feature-Length Films in 12 Months" released
21 votes -
Art house movies are having their TikTok moment
6 votes -
YouTuber Joel Haver to create twelve feature-length films in twelve months
26 votes -
‘Scream 7’ director Christopher Landon exits “a dream job that turned into a nightmare”
10 votes -
Melissa Barrera dropped from ‘Scream VII’ after social media posts amid Israel-Hamas war
25 votes -
A fired ‘Scream’ star, clients booted from agencies and a secret Tom Cruise meeting: Inside Hollywood’s divide over Israel
23 votes -
Is cinema dying? And if so, who is responsible? – A murder mystery
23 votes -
How the ‘Barbie’ vs ‘Oppenheimer’ online discourse is helping both films: It’s no longer a case of “Either/or” that it first appeared to be but rather “Which one first?”
28 votes -
We have to leave here together (full length film)
8 votes -
‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’ director tells fans to stop attacking film critics for Top 10 list snubs: ‘Don’t add’ to toxic discourse
4 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 -
Guy on doomed planet mostly concerned with skin color of people in movies
25 votes -
Fake accounts fueled the ‘Snyder Cut’ online army
12 votes -
How A24 became the ultimate film cult
8 votes -
Oscars: Twitter’s top fan-voted film will be recognized during broadcast
7 votes -
David Lynch has a YouTube channel on which, each day, he gives a weather report and picks a number from a jar
15 votes -
'Last Jedi' hate tweets were "weaponized" by Russia, says study
10 votes -
Postmortem: Every Frame a Painting
15 votes -
James Gunn fired as director of 'Guardians of the Galaxy' franchise over offensive tweets
19 votes -
Star Wars actress Kelly Marie Tran deletes Instagram posts after abuse
18 votes