Rean no Kiseki
Banned
avoidingthepuddle: $28,177
avoidingthepuddle: $28,177
I think a lot of what happens in the entertainment business is a sort of bubble. It is the perception that putting money in an well known figure it will revert in more money for your brand. Nowadays I am unsure if this works as in the past… At least in my case I couldn’t care less. You quite often see this bubble bursting in sports. Most of the soccer teams are heavily on debt while soccer players make millions and one day the team simple can’t make it (Barcelona is the most recent victim).A lot of "old man yells at clouds" vibes in this post.
You also say this about Hollywood actors, tv show hosts, youtube channels, athletes, etc?
When have scientists ever been more rewarded for their contributions than people in the entertainment industry?
Half that after tax.Wait, that last list you posted...is that suggesting that Asmongold has made a total of 26 million on Twitch alone? If that is true, sweet lord have mercy.
I think a lot of what happens in the entertainment business is a sort of bubble. It is the perception that putting money in an well known figure it will revert in more money for your brand. Nowadays I am unsure if this works as in the past… At least in my case I couldn’t care less. You quite often see this bubble bursting in sports. Most of the soccer teams are heavily on debt while soccer players make millions and one day the team simple can’t make it (Barcelona is the most recent victim).
Lord Hagrid can now afford some premium green herb
I was thinking the same lmao.Wait, that last list you posted...is that suggesting that Asmongold has made a total of 26 million on Twitch alone? If that is true, sweet lord have mercy.
Oh, so they’re practically poor then.Half that after tax.
The same goes for those groups too. But streamers are probably at the bottom of that group. Even a youtuber has to put in a lot of effort to make videos.
I’d rather be a youtuber. Twitch is longer hours and you always need to be on. Top youtubers don’t even edit their own videos a lot of the time now.
I can imagine being a full time twitch streamer to be a very draining experience. Dont get me wrong, still better than a real job.
go stream for 8 hours a day against toxic people calling you fat, ugly shit for a year. see how u keep your mentallity.The same goes for those groups too. But streamers are probably at the bottom of that group. Even a youtuber has to put in a lot of effort to make videos.
go stream for 8 hours a day against toxic people calling you fat, ugly shit for a year. see how u keep your mentallity.
Thinking youtube is hard, they straight up don't even edit there own video's or manage there own channels, its all done by organisations that do it for large chunks of youtubers. that's why ever thumbnail has the same soy face because its the same group that does it. They just make some content and boom there you got upload and u can chill out again.
Yeah real jobs are draining too but without the thousands of dollars a day. Of course most twitch streamers have 5 viewers but eh. And the long hours, they choose to make long hours because they know every hour they sit there simps will donate thousands of dollars. Hard to feel sorry for them.
Go work 10 hours in mcdonalds. Nah I don't feel bad for them.
Where did I say I feel sorry for them? I just think being a youtuber would be a more comfortable lifestyle by quite a bit.
You have a real chip on your shoulder with streamers. Get over it.
It's worth remembering that there are hundreds of thousands of streamers, and the overwhelming majority earn nothing. It's like being a comedian or a singer: there are millions, and only a small percentage make the $$$ due to talent or luck or that "it" factor. Streaming only pays off if you can entertain people, and you either have that gift or you don't.
So looking at streaming and going "oh, that's so easy why I am working my office job?" is like looking at an expensive painting and going "oh, that probably only took a few hours why am I working my office job?". You're ignoring the fact that the artist in question obviously has something you and 99.999999% of people don't. You (and me) could stream 24/7 and we'd get nowhere cause we're probably about as fun to watch as paint drying.
Hahaha asmongold is a gajillionaire and he still looks like that
I'm surprised robceedee or however he's called isn't on there, he makes a wee bit o' bank
Sorry but this is just not true. There are millions of artists/entertaines out there with great talent who with never reach the top because they don't have any connection, ability for initial investment, or no accessibility in getting those things, no oportunieitioes. There are plenty of people 'at the top' with no talent but are rich kids, or had connections, maybe some luck.
Thinking you get the the top by just being good and working hard is laughably untrue and unrealistic.
Sorry but this is just not true. There are millions of artists/entertaines out there with great talent who with never reach the top because they don't have any connection, ability for initial investment, or no accessibility in getting those things, no oportunieitioes. There are plenty of people 'at the top' with no talent but are rich kids, or had connections, maybe some luck.
Thinking you get the the top by just being good and working hard is laughably untrue and unrealistic.
And if you ask them they say nooo we earn like a normal underpayed workerWait, that last list you posted...is that suggesting that Asmongold has made a total of 26 million on Twitch alone? If that is true, sweet lord have mercy.
It is a lot better than what I earned before when I used to work in a warehouse driving forklifts 60 hours per week, earning about $40.000 per year. I wanted more pay and less work so I tried affiliate marketing. Now 6 years later I'm so glad that I gave it a shot.That's...still a lot bro
Come on Pewdiepie started off from nothing. Sure his family was fairly well off but it doesn't look like relied on them at all. As much as his videos are absolute shoutfests and just garbage, props to him.
I remember I used to have a channel and just making a couple of videos over the space of a month was stress enough. Imagine making videos practically every single day! Definitely hard work and dedication.
I suppose part of it is luck because a lot of people have that "viral" moment before their channel takes off, but still most of that is organic. It's not like they had a production company behind them at the time.
Pewdiepie was a rich kid, go read his bio. His mom was an information officer, dad a business executive, and grandparent owned an art gallery. He was able to invest in tech from high school buying himself computers.
This is what I mean by 'initial investment' , if you legitimately have nothing to start with, you can't build anything that would make money, that's the trap. The rag to riches stuff your sold is never true
Also, being rich sort of allows you to be more lucky, as you can try more things without ever having to worry if you fail. 'If try YouTube and fail no big deal, my money can pay for my next thing I try' whereas somebody without anything can't take any risks.
An entire streaming setup costs less than a thousand bucks. Money is not the issue here.Pewdiepie was a rich kid, go read his bio.
Thinking you get the the top by just being good and working hard is laughably untrue and unrealistic.
Yeah I actually sort of respect him for that. I could imagine fucking crazy with that much money. He still looks homeless.
You serious? "He could afford to buy a computer so that's why he's successful". Ok dude.Pewdiepie was a rich kid, go read his bio. His mom was an information officer, dad a business executive, and grandparent owned an art gallery. He was able to invest in tech from high school buying himself computers.
Do you work for PC gamer or is it just a clever name? lol. On the subject... Good for them I guess.It is a lot better than what I earned before when I used to work in a warehouse driving forklifts 60 hours per week, earning about $40.000 per year. I wanted more pay and less work so I tried affiliate marketing. Now 6 years later I'm so glad that I gave it a shot.
"The rag to riches stuff your sold is never true"Pewdiepie was a rich kid, go read his bio. His mom was an information officer, dad a business executive, and grandparent owned an art gallery. He was able to invest in tech from high school buying himself computers.
This is what I mean by 'initial investment' , if you legitimately have nothing to start with, you can't build anything that would make money, that's the trap. The rag to riches stuff your sold is never true
Also, being rich sort of allows you to be more lucky, as you can try more things without ever having to worry if you fail. 'If try YouTube and fail no big deal, my money can pay for my next thing I try' whereas somebody without anything can't take any risks.
Buy a hot tub.I streamed for almost a year and got my affiliate status after 4 months.
Didn't even make 100 bucks from it and just quit.
I wasn't very good at it and started in 2020 when everybody and their mom were streaming.
Wish I started when it was called Justin.tv.
And on the topic, I also released a game on Steam years ago and barely made 500 so I'm consistent in my failure.
what game?I streamed for almost a year and got my affiliate status after 4 months.
Didn't even make 100 bucks from it and just quit.
I wasn't very good at it and started in 2020 when everybody and their mom were streaming.
Wish I started when it was called Justin.tv.
And on the topic, I also released a game on Steam years ago and barely made 500 so I'm consistent in my failure.