Didnt like her on Ridiculousness
This is the way I use YouTube. I watch a lot of old movies that have been uploaded (recently, I watched the original version of the Stepford Wives, Peter Lorre’s film M, even some old Charlie Chan stuff and I watched every episode of the Tim Hutton/Maury Chakin series of Nero Wolfe). It can be great for that sort of thing, as well as listening to digital versions of my old vinyl LPs. But I never watch this graveyeargirl or whatever she is. I looked her up on YouTube, and saw enough without even clicking on a video.
The old line is the great thing about the internet is anyone can publish anything. The terrible thing about the internet is anyone can publish anything.
I watch youtube to see live concert footage of my favorite jam bands. I can see shows from last night or shows from time past where I attended. In fact you can see me in lots of them if you know where to look.
I can’t understand why I never heard of her before.
Way to go, youtube! And gravy girl, too!
In junior high, inspired by Cheech & Chong and Firesign Theater LP’s, my buddy and I made comedy tapes on his Panasonic cassette recorder. Fart humor did not predominate, though it did not go unrepresented. I was also friends with an early-developed girl who took a lot of grief for her boobs. If only there’d been YouTube then, we’d all be aged, corrupt millionaires.
Maybe there was some other subject that ruthlessly consumed your every waking moment, leaving you incapable of focusing on anything else?
I thought the 1# money maker was some anonymous woman that does toy reviews, which are great BTW if you’re interested in the item and want to check it out but can’t in person.
Disney Collector. (Yes, I have 2 small girls in the house.)
Eh, I like Bunny. I’ve been watching her for a couple of years. I like the message she sends to young girls. She knows she’s not beautiful, she has a huge mouth etc., but she’s comfortable with herself. She tells girls they should love themselves no matter how they look.
I like the series she does called “Does this thing really work?” Where she takes those stupid “As seen on TV” products and tests them out. It’s pretty entertaining.
She nets around $462,798 a year making YouTube videos. I can’t hate on that hustle.
That’s pretty specific for “around.”
Give or take a few hundred bucks
Listen, without YouTube I never would have seen Stalking Cat, which more than makes up for the rest of the crap on there.
I watched one, and it was good, except it went on for about 15 minutes too long.