HdE
Comic Book Guy
Thanks for the kind comments, guys! I'm honestly a bit taken aback at some of the comments and messages I've been getting through different arms of social media since I broke the news.
Just gonna do a quickie lightning round of responses to the last few posts:
I'm leaving everything up until the 20th, so you've got time. That date is key because that's when Youtube are dropping the hammer. After that, I'll be setting everthing to 'private' and leaving them online for a while so that they're still in Youtube's system, just in case there's some kind of policy reversal. Google are copping MAJOR heat for this move, so I wouldn't rule out such a thing. I'm also not holding my breath, mind.
At first impressions, having surveyed the outpouring of anger and frustration, the answer to that question is... a LOT. This action on Youtube's part marks a pretty clear intent to corporatize the site even further than they already have. However, they've also failed to understand how circular Youtube is by nature. Channels that are small but regularly active tend to show an interest in other channels, even if only by watching their content. Lots of smaller creators, feeling rightly disenfranchised after having effectively been shown the door, simply won't visit the site now.
It's a bit like how my crappy experience with the boss of a Vauxhall showroom years ago has ensured I'll never buy Vauxhall vehicle. Once the bridge is burned for a lot of people, it's burned without hope of repair.
I won't lie - I appreciate that sentiment a lot! It shows that folks value the work and effort that went into the videos. And don't fret - I'll still be around to complain about the price of anime, the size of collectors' edition box sets and remind all you kids how I'm old enough that I remember when all of this was fields. You know, before the war, when Labour were in power and you could afford to buy a house after a decade...
Thanks, Sarah! As I said in my last post, what happens now is (yet another) period of sitting back, cracking on with the bread-and-butter work and waiting to see what happens when the next landscape shift occurs.
Youtube might indeed be an ever changing mess, but some of the fledgling competitors are adapting as well. Very few of them are attractive prospects, as I'd already mentioned in this thread. But there's no reason why they couldn't be in time.
The way things stand right now is that the guys I was going to jump into the gaming channel with are going to look at possible alternatives and weigh up how lucrative they might be. A sad fact of the game is, if you're going to pump out regular content, it HAS to pay out. This is what's going to kill Youtube - they're asking for a full-time investment from new creators in hopes that they'll meet targets that are already unrealistic, and will only get worse. It'll get to a point where no-one can do it on the level that they used to.
Anyways... I've survived worse. We'll see what happens.
Just gonna do a quickie lightning round of responses to the last few posts:
On that note I’ll need to see about catching up on your vids that I haven’t seen yet!
I'm leaving everything up until the 20th, so you've got time. That date is key because that's when Youtube are dropping the hammer. After that, I'll be setting everthing to 'private' and leaving them online for a while so that they're still in Youtube's system, just in case there's some kind of policy reversal. Google are copping MAJOR heat for this move, so I wouldn't rule out such a thing. I'm also not holding my breath, mind.
One wonders just how many people who have found themselves under the magic 1,000 subscribers mark will collectively think "Right, **** this for a game of soldiers. I'm off."
At first impressions, having surveyed the outpouring of anger and frustration, the answer to that question is... a LOT. This action on Youtube's part marks a pretty clear intent to corporatize the site even further than they already have. However, they've also failed to understand how circular Youtube is by nature. Channels that are small but regularly active tend to show an interest in other channels, even if only by watching their content. Lots of smaller creators, feeling rightly disenfranchised after having effectively been shown the door, simply won't visit the site now.
It's a bit like how my crappy experience with the boss of a Vauxhall showroom years ago has ensured I'll never buy Vauxhall vehicle. Once the bridge is burned for a lot of people, it's burned without hope of repair.
I for one won't be using trick apps to hang onto @HdE's videos, and will instead invest in crossing my fingers in the hope that they resurface one day. In the meantime, I'll content myself with reading his (hopefully) continuing forum posts while hearing his now-familiar voice in my mind's ear.
I won't lie - I appreciate that sentiment a lot! It shows that folks value the work and effort that went into the videos. And don't fret - I'll still be around to complain about the price of anime, the size of collectors' edition box sets and remind all you kids how I'm old enough that I remember when all of this was fields. You know, before the war, when Labour were in power and you could afford to buy a house after a decade...
I can only admire the way you've persevered, @HdE , through all the problems and impediments that YouTube has thrown in your way, only to end up with this latest slap in the face. And I've really enjoyed your video reviews and think they definitely deserve a home somewhere else (as @Rui says above) if you decide to create a new home for them. Also sorry to see that this other project has been put on hold (you're an excellent voiceover voice and deserve to be better known!)
I'm hoping that this will prove to be one of those 'As One Door Closes, Another Opens...' moments.
Thanks, Sarah! As I said in my last post, what happens now is (yet another) period of sitting back, cracking on with the bread-and-butter work and waiting to see what happens when the next landscape shift occurs.
Youtube might indeed be an ever changing mess, but some of the fledgling competitors are adapting as well. Very few of them are attractive prospects, as I'd already mentioned in this thread. But there's no reason why they couldn't be in time.
The way things stand right now is that the guys I was going to jump into the gaming channel with are going to look at possible alternatives and weigh up how lucrative they might be. A sad fact of the game is, if you're going to pump out regular content, it HAS to pay out. This is what's going to kill Youtube - they're asking for a full-time investment from new creators in hopes that they'll meet targets that are already unrealistic, and will only get worse. It'll get to a point where no-one can do it on the level that they used to.
Anyways... I've survived worse. We'll see what happens.
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