9erempiree
03-27-2016, 09:57 AM
I recently followed a genre of people traveling in their vans and RV's around the country. I thought it was cool till I ran across a common theme and that was, asking for 'donations' to help them in their journey.
I was like :wtf:
So I'm going to pay you so you can travel the country just to post YT videos. The genre started off interesting with life on the road with tips, advice and footage of the various places they went to but left a bad taste with the 'donation' bit.
Going back to E-beggars...are Youtubers equivalent to a homeless beggar? Every damn video has the cliche....click and subscribe, thumbs up if you like and comment. When these cliches are brought up...I make sure to never watch them again.
I get it...people want to make money off YT and some of them have a YT career but don't make it so obvious.
Don't get me started on Instagram models. They are the same except they are whoring themselves for followers so some small startup company can pay the wannabe models to hold their soft drinks in a bikini.
I was like :wtf:
So I'm going to pay you so you can travel the country just to post YT videos. The genre started off interesting with life on the road with tips, advice and footage of the various places they went to but left a bad taste with the 'donation' bit.
Going back to E-beggars...are Youtubers equivalent to a homeless beggar? Every damn video has the cliche....click and subscribe, thumbs up if you like and comment. When these cliches are brought up...I make sure to never watch them again.
I get it...people want to make money off YT and some of them have a YT career but don't make it so obvious.
Don't get me started on Instagram models. They are the same except they are whoring themselves for followers so some small startup company can pay the wannabe models to hold their soft drinks in a bikini.