Online Video killing the TV Star

This article was first published by dmcityview.com

Every generation there is something that puzzles the preceding generations. Working backwards; gay marriage, Twitter, blogs, computers, hip-hop, videogames, punk rock, et cetera. Now while this list only spans recent history, I’m willing to bet the trend extends all the way back to the discovery of fire and the creation of the wheel. The fact is change can be scary and almost always confusing. The most recent trend to ding both factors is internet fame, commonly referred to as “YouTubers.”

In the early 2000s, blogs were all the rage. With high speed internet and limitless online space to chronicle our world, anyone could publish their thoughts, reports, and insights into whatever interested them. Some of these blogs lead to book deals, TV shows, movies, and mega website networks, however most lead to nothing more than inane drivel. By the mid 2000s the internet became over-saturated with blogs and are no longer the rage they once were. What replaced blogs? “Vlogs,” or video-blogs.

In the online publishing space, the term “Blogosphere” (referring to the collective world of blogging) is the second only to vlog in cringe-worthiness. As painful as it sounds to read about someone’s boring life, it is 10 times worse to watch them talk about it, and yet somehow there are thousands of YouTube content producers who do just that. Even worse, some of them are millionaires.

Last month, Los Angeles played host to the sixth annual VidCon, a mega-conference of online video producers. More than 300 of the most popular YouTube content creators and 20,000 superfans meeting and greeting over the world of online video. Now before you write-off VidCon as the world’s largest web video flea market, know that these video producers are the next generation of video superstars. PewDiePie, Nigahiga, Joey Graceffa, Vsauce– these are not cartoon characters, they’re millionaires who have accrued hoards of dedicated fans on YouTube through their stylized delivery of opinions and observations.

What could possibly propel weirdos with names like PewDiePie and Vsauce to become millionaires? Games and Science. PewDiePie’s humorous reviews, walkthroughs, and discussions of board and videogames has propel the 25 year-old swedish online personality to billions of views and nearly $10 million in advertising revenue. Vsauce delivers family friendly deep dives into science, studies, psychology, and much more while raking in hundreds of millions of views.

There are hundreds of these YouTubers creating goofy and enticing videos as their full time job. Subjects including make-up, gardening, baking, car repair, music covers, sports– virtually everything you could possibly have an interest is making someone rich as a vlogger on YouTube.

So now the question is who’s watching these videos? The answer is almost always teenagers and pre-teens. After 50 years as the king of media, television is slowly being replaced by the internet, and this generation of kids is quickly making it happen. YouTube is niche targeted, short and consumable, and interactive. Comment on a Vsauce video, you could possibly get a reply or be mentioned in the next installment. As popular as Big Bang Theory or CW’s The Flash are, fans will never get a shout out during an episode.

The good thing about YouTube is open to all comers. Just because you don’t get the YouTuber craze, doesn’t mean you can’t join it. Jump on YouTube right now and search your favorite hobby plus YouTuber and I guarantee you’ll friend a dozen channels worth watching. Better yet, if you search comes up empty than you might have a million dollar YouTube idea in the making. If that happens, call me and I’ll help set up your new vlogging career.


Patrick Boberg is a central Iowa creative media specialist. For more tech insights, follow him on Twitter @PatBoBomb

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