Of course they do. The online comments are so stressful - the negative ones for sure - that they feel like a bunch of wrecking balls hitting your head at once. Folks, please remember this: Dignity First, Fantasies Last! That will help a lot of people rather than see them learn lessons as subscribers don’t directly correlate to dollars at a 1:1 ratio.
@iloveyoumadhuri I'll try to illustrate my observations. I am 57 years. In the old days a young starlet was umbrelled under as organisation such as Hollywood. Those organisations knew the system and guided the starlet to fame. They also knew the trappings of fame: crazed, demanding fans, gruelling schedules, intrusive tabloids and gossip columnists, the imbued adoration of the world as they release a successful product to the world like a movie or great music album. These organisations also knew the impact of fame and fortune on their Stars, burnout, over inflated and unbalanced ego, drained of their essence, drug and alcohol abuse and they knew the necessity of stepping into the Stars life helping them, getting them support services of psychiatric help, or clinics to give them respite, rejuvenation and a reset. That is the grounding, the earth given to what becomes an eventual icon. Channels don't have the support network those Stars had. Your mostly on your own, with a handful of people who, like friends and family, who supported and help your channel grow from its humble roots. The channel grows your efforts pay off, you feel satisfied and celebrate. At some point you quit your day job and place your efforts into your dream, your channel. The fame can be sudden and unexpected, ppl recognise you on the streets, bomb you with compliments and adoration. You spend your energy trying to keep your algorithm and post regularly. You eventually inform ppl if you can't make your deadline, that takes, or drains your energy, plus you still have to produce your product. You read comments many the same lines, the same congratulations and the scathing ones. Your product must stay at the same standard or improve, afterall, Maya bites! But there's no one to point you to help and support of famous people because you're in the new class of the floating amoeba fame. Eventually, a crisis occurs you have to find help that pulls you out of the addiction of fame and find balance and continue sobered by your release and continue in a new frame of mind By sober, I mean grounded, not referring to an alcohol addiction. One question: Am I correct in my many observations of utube creators? I am not a fan of any channels. I pay my subscription watch and enjoy. Empathising with ppl as they rise to fame etc. But in the end I am enjoying the entertainment offered from Utube
the thumbnail and title combination give off a vibe of MKBHD-quit from youtube
True😂 I just went to check his channel
Would appreciate if ur thumbnail is about the video
Clickbait thumbnail.
He's really practical
Can you give me tips how can i make best video on youtube in gaming category??
Lots of people get burned out!!!
Of course they do. The online comments are so stressful - the negative ones for sure - that they feel like a bunch of wrecking balls hitting your head at once.
Folks, please remember this: Dignity First, Fantasies Last! That will help a lot of people rather than see them learn lessons as subscribers don’t directly correlate to dollars at a 1:1 ratio.
@iloveyoumadhuri I'll try to illustrate my observations. I am 57 years. In the old days a young starlet was umbrelled under as organisation such as Hollywood. Those organisations knew the system and guided the starlet to fame. They also knew the trappings of fame: crazed, demanding fans, gruelling schedules, intrusive tabloids and gossip columnists, the imbued adoration of the world as they release a successful product to the world like a movie or great music album.
These organisations also knew the impact of fame and fortune on their Stars, burnout, over inflated and unbalanced ego, drained of their essence, drug and alcohol abuse and they knew the necessity of stepping into the Stars life helping them, getting them support services of psychiatric help, or clinics to give them respite, rejuvenation and a reset. That is the grounding, the earth given to what becomes an eventual icon.
Channels don't have the support network those Stars had. Your mostly on your own, with a handful of people who, like friends and family, who supported and help your channel grow from its humble roots. The channel grows your efforts pay off, you feel satisfied and celebrate. At some point you quit your day job and place your efforts into your dream, your channel.
The fame can be sudden and unexpected, ppl recognise you on the streets, bomb you with compliments and adoration.
You spend your energy trying to keep your algorithm and post regularly. You eventually inform ppl if you can't make your deadline, that takes, or drains your energy, plus you still have to produce your product.
You read comments many the same lines, the same congratulations and the scathing ones.
Your product must stay at the same standard or improve, afterall, Maya bites!
But there's no one to point you to help and support of famous people because you're in the new class of the floating amoeba fame.
Eventually, a crisis occurs you have to find help that pulls you out of the addiction of fame and find balance and continue sobered by your release and continue in a new frame of mind
By sober, I mean grounded, not referring to an alcohol addiction.
One question: Am I correct in my many observations of utube creators?
I am not a fan of any channels. I pay my subscription watch and enjoy. Empathising with ppl as they rise to fame etc. But in the end I am enjoying the entertainment offered from Utube
Thumbnail is different than video. Scam alert ‼️