‘You can’t pause the internet’: social media creators hit by burnout
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Facebook isn't the only site these people use...
Zuck owns more than Facebook, too. ANY big social media platform is similarly toxic.
These people have co-opted our social discourse for evil causes. And they aren’t the only way to share work online.
Creative people do not have a right to my admiration if they provide fresh bait that the oligarchs use to degrade democracy and civil society
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This whole article is nothing but "waaaaaahhhhhh".
They should shut up and just enjoy doing something they're having an easier time doing, than grinding your average 9-5 job. Do they really think they're the only people on the planet?
Yes, they do. Sitting alone in a room, creating video content creates a self-centered and narcissistic worldview. It doesn’t matter how many followers you have you are not really interacting with a single one of them. Get out of your house and meet people in your neighborhood, share your work with them then I’ll be impressed
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Nah, if you are feeding the Zuck, not my team. The principled creatives aren’t there.
It sucks to try to make a living as a creative. But giving your efforts to support social media platforms controlled by the worst people is inexcusable. Zuck literally and provably helped the fascists gain power.
The creatives I can respect create because they are compelled to. They work jobs and create when they can. They share their work on less shitty platforms and in actual real life.
Curious who signs your paychecks?
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effluencers
It perfectly describes their contribution to this reality. Thank you.
I'm hoping it catches on. Spread it around.
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Zuck owns more than Facebook, too. ANY big social media platform is similarly toxic.
These people have co-opted our social discourse for evil causes. And they aren’t the only way to share work online.
Creative people do not have a right to my admiration if they provide fresh bait that the oligarchs use to degrade democracy and civil society
The question isn't about admiration, it's about considering them worthy of being respected as fellow human beings who are also struggling. You're just shitting on them because the way they make their living is more directly linkable to sources you don't like.
Every job is going to be that way, one way or another. Even many charities will have shady ties somewhere, that most of the volunteers and employees don't know shit about. Shitting on these people because you don't respect the things they're linked to, and ultimately have no control over, is petty and meaningless. It devalues them as humans, and as much as I'm sure you don't think so, they're still human. And deserve to be treated as such.
If they're like the Pauls or something, I can see criticizing them for being shitty people... but that's not what you're doing, you're shitting on them for being part of a system that exists whether they make use of it or not. And will continue to exist whether they use it or not.
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I heard someone talking about a content creator they watch, and how that creator basically can't take a vacation without losing tons of followers and potentially a major chunk of their income.
Yep, this exactly. They can never clock out at the end of the day. It isn’t 8 hours of work and you’re done. You’re having to constantly try to innovate. Make tons of content, spend so much time editing, constant filming, constant planning. And if you deviate in your schedule, or upload some content that isn’t interesting, the algorithm punishes you and you may even get people that unsubscribe.
Must be hell when you can’t afford to take a vacation from that content creator life. Can never really “switch off”. Plus the fact that less than 1% actually make it big, and it’s mostly based on luck plus years and years of determination.
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I heard someone talking about a content creator they watch, and how that creator basically can't take a vacation without losing tons of followers and potentially a major chunk of their income.
I hear this all the time but I struggle to see how it is true. How many people regularly trawl through their feed looking for creators who haven’t posted in X days and unfollowing them? It would be a minuscule number. I’m pretty darn selective with my follows and I think I’d do this once a year, tops.
I think creators are conflating the everyday ups and downs of follower counts on their platform(s) as being something more. And I think the platforms themselves are encouraging this mentality because they need fresh content.
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The responses in this thread are sick. So much vitriol for members of your own class who are just trying to make a living doing what they love and creating things.
in the early days of the internet, I'm talking GeoCities days, I started what would be called a podcast about gaming. I recorded with windows sound recorder and a shitty Logitech desktop mic and then ran it through RealAudio to compress it to a downloadable format.
I shared it with communities online like IRC and BBS's.
I got shit on so fucking much that I quit after my 6th cast. I received so much hate that I honestly thought of self harm.
now, it wasn't right that it happened. but, it happened decades ago before podcasting, live streaming, YouTube, content creators, and influencers were a "thing". my point is, it is a danger of creating anything for the world. if you don't have the skin for it, the world will eat you alive, so get over it.
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I heard someone talking about a content creator they watch, and how that creator basically can't take a vacation without losing tons of followers and potentially a major chunk of their income.
A lot of creators will have a number of videos created ahead of time, so they can go on holiday and still have a steady release schedule.
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This is the most boomer take I've ever seen on this website. And that includes what few conservatives have filtered in.
Does social media create a physical product? Remember, computers need engineers to repair them and electricians to keep the power on. Physical infrastructure.
May I ask what your age range is, and what you do for a living, as well as how much income you make?
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Does social media create a physical product? Remember, computers need engineers to repair them and electricians to keep the power on. Physical infrastructure.
May I ask what your age range is, and what you do for a living, as well as how much income you make?
By that metric do authors or poets or actors create a physical product? Do computer programers? Since the death of physical media, books and art are now far more frequently digital than paper or canvas. Applications and software is 100% digital. Newspapers are dead, so journalists don't create a physical product. Is your argument that only physical labor producing physical things is "real" work?
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This is the most boomer take I've ever seen on this website. And that includes what few conservatives have filtered in.
yeah I'm pretty shocked that a socialist website would value labor over entertainment like that
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The responses in this thread are sick. So much vitriol for members of your own class who are just trying to make a living doing what they love and creating things.
I dont give a fuck about their burnout lol. if they love it so much why are they whining about doing it?
I'm in health care, you think illness has a pause button? I chose this, they chose theirs.
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A lot of creators will have a number of videos created ahead of time, so they can go on holiday and still have a steady release schedule.
Doesn't help if you're a streamer, though. I guess that was a part I left out, whoops -_-
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I hear this all the time but I struggle to see how it is true. How many people regularly trawl through their feed looking for creators who haven’t posted in X days and unfollowing them? It would be a minuscule number. I’m pretty darn selective with my follows and I think I’d do this once a year, tops.
I think creators are conflating the everyday ups and downs of follower counts on their platform(s) as being something more. And I think the platforms themselves are encouraging this mentality because they need fresh content.
Just because you do something a certain way doesn't mean everyone does. A huge chunk of these peoples income comes from the random people who find their videos or streams because of the "algorithm". Not from their regular viewers. Those regular viewers allow for a certain amount of steadiness, but they're also more likely to watch videos at a later time rather than right when they're uploaded. Which is a significant drop in revenue for each view.
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Does social media create a physical product? Remember, computers need engineers to repair them and electricians to keep the power on. Physical infrastructure.
May I ask what your age range is, and what you do for a living, as well as how much income you make?
Just keeping up with the boomer takes...
Something doesn't need to be a physical product to hold tangible value.
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I’m so glad I was young before this stupid reality happened. I have a regular job and no desire for internet fame.
I asked my younger family members what they want to be when they grow up, and being a YouTuber was at the top of the list. I hate this so much.
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yeah I'm pretty shocked that a socialist website would value labor over entertainment like that
Socialism is about more than unions, that's just the most obvious aspect in a heavily capitalist society. It's about the sharing of burdens, which includes more than physical labor.
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Boo hoo, losers. Your device has a power switch. Influencers have a warped and inflated sense of the value they create. They can stop at any time and use their skills in other ways.
Making good content is hard, but ‘good’ content doesn’t have an expiration date. Shallow brain-rot content does and that’s what the algorithms reward.
The entitlement that influencers have is nauseating. There are many creators out there laboring in near obscurity and producing useful content all the time for little or no compensation.
They are tools for Zuck and fools for propping his platforms up. It sounds like a hard slog, but they can stop any time.
but ‘good’ content doesn’t have an expiration date.
Yes, it does, depending on the topic. If it's video games, like with MOBAs that get updated regularly, all the content for that patch expires after two weeks. Itemization and champion builds change so much that whatever value there was for you to build similarly is lost, and you're left with a mildly amusing thing about how something used to be.
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Just keeping up with the boomer takes...
Something doesn't need to be a physical product to hold tangible value.
Where did I say that social media creates no value whatsoever? I'm just saying that without those who work in physical reality, creating tangibles with tangible things, make the mental edifices possible.
Also, you didn't choose to share your profession with us. It makes me think that you're attempting to create a social media presence of your own. Trust me, it's pointless. I had a facebook fan page with 150-175 people on it. All foolish vanity, nothing more.
To win the acclaim of the mob is what the worst of us amongst human beings do. Do you want to be a politician in terms of expression?
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