Sorry I didn't reply sooner, I got sidetracked. Mainly, I just don't get the whole hate for Youtube in general. Like I said, I'm torn on the president interview thing but I find some stuff on youtube amazing. It's not only cat videos and self obsessed teenagers. The youtube channels I listen most are educational and I find that Hank Green produces really good content. Of course it's not perfect and simplified to be more accessible. Of course CrashCourse World History is not the best place to learn world history, but it's an amazing starting point, especially to get young people interested. I know I listened to more than 7h podcast on the Mongols after the 10 mins episode on the Mongols. I just don't see the fact that accomplishing something on youtube is not worth much. The project for awesome is a Youtube event he created that raised 1.2 million $ this year. Even if that's all a circlejerk, it's a circlejerk that actually does some good. In the end, maybe the guy that created crash course is not the guy to interview the president, but the fact that his accomplishments are all within youtube doesn't make it any less interesting to me. After all, I totally see the logic of the White House when they do that. Of course it would be great if they could reach the younger electorate through the new yorker, but that's simply not the reality today and something like that is actually a pretty good way to get that audience to listen. Pretty much the same reason Obama did an AMA on reddit. But on the other hand I'm sure nobody would appreciate the president getting interviewed by Justin Bieber... I guess that the debates lies in the fact of where the line lies between "the present is in touch with the youngins" and "that's unacceptable". I'm sure some people found the interviews on the Daily Show as stupid too. PS: The brain scoop is a channel he helped Emily start and it's pretty awesome too.
I've worked with Morgan Freeman. I've worked with Carson Daly. I've worked with Jessica Alba. I've worked with Ryan Secrest. I've worked with Reba McIntyre. I've worked with Sharon Osbourne. I've worked with Shirley Jones. I've worked with Hannah Hart. Can you guess which one was an order of magnitude more of a pain in the ass? Can you guess which one has accomplished exactly fuckall beyond Youtube? Now - you can extend that. I just looked at the Vidcon 2014 speakers and I've worked with about 40% of them. And everything I said about Hannah Hart? Holds true for every single person I've worked with. I'm glad someone on Youtube encouraged you to listen to a podcast about the Mongols. But nobody I've worked with who does anything on Youtube has ever done anything that would interest anyone over 20, and they've never done anything that isn't all about them. And that's where the Youtube hate comes from: Entitled attention whores that add nothing to the general dialogue and are more of a pain in the ass to work with than Ryan Secrest. This is not an idle observation. This is a cumulative experience over half a decade interacting with these fucks, rather than simply clicking on their faces.Mainly, I just don't get the whole hate for Youtube in general.
Hannah Hart? Is she the lady that cooks while drunk ? I think I watched one of her videos at some point and decided my time would be better spent getting drunk and cooking myself. Yeah, you're right that our experiences differ greatly. I've never actually talked to any Youtubers, I'm simply a consumer. I guess all I'm left with is the hope that the ones I listen to are different. I think 70% of my feed are 40 year old men making educational content and try to keep their private life private. Soooo I'll cling on to my hope they're different from the teenagers and keep enjoying the content :D Destin from SmarterEveryDay seems like the most genuine, dedicated and interesting person ever. He wants to be an astronaut. Like for real. I think he's an aerospace engineer and actively tries to get the job. I'd love to talk to him someday. Thanks for the perspective tho, I don't hear a lot of anti-youtube arguments in my personal internet bubble.
I have no meat in this conversation, but I do have one thing to say. Why is Bieber the punching bag for a younger generation? He's just a pop singer, and more to the point, he hasn't been relevant for years as the "new big thing." Why is he the picture of the new hip-young-old folks of the Internet?
He sure comes across as super-douchey in every interview I've ever seen. However, the one person I know that has actually interacted with him was an epic prick to Justin Bieber. Buddy of mine was doing some PSAs with Selena Gomez back when they were dating and Bieber was just sort of hanging out. He came up to my buddy the sound guy and said "Hey, man, what's happening? Can I borrow a set of cans to listen in on this?" Now, normally the response to anyone asking to listen on a PSA is "absolutely, I brought a dozen comteks for this specific purpose and I'm billing the production company $15 each so you bet! Here's one just for you!" but my buddy responded with get away from me, you douche. It's kind of a chicken-or-egg problem: if total strangers have no problems calling you a douche to your face when they've never so much as interacted with you before, do you have any incentive to NOT be a douche?