Tuesday, February 24, 2015

YouTube-- The Make or Break for Celebrities?


Look through your browser history--or don't--and count how many YouTube videos you've most recently watched. If you're like me, you've probably spent copious amounts of time watching cat videos or perhaps footage of your favorite band behind the scenes. I can't even begin to count how many times I've watched certain YouTubers over the course of the past couple days.

When you think about watching YouTube, most people simply think about looking up a certain topic; such as "funny cat Vines" or "kid falling off a bike while playing the ukulele". Many people, on the other hand (myself included), are avid viewers of many of today's hit "YouTubers" (or YouTube celebrities). I'm not afraid to admit that I watched all of PewDiePie's Amnesia: The Dark Descent playlist or that I have a music playlist dedicated to Lindsay Stirling and Pentatonix. I don't go to YouTube to look for a few minutes of entertainment--I go to connect and idolize these people like they are celebrities. They are celebrities, but maybe not in the same sense as Kim Kardashian or Robert Downey Jr, they are the internet's version of celebrities. They are the products of being "YouTube sensations".

Does this mean that anyone can become a celebrity? Indeed. You may not be able to make it big on television, but if you post a video of your cat falling off the counter--you might become a star. YouTube can make anyone a celebrity through the use of views, advertisements, and various other methods. Many of the people that are now considered "Famous YouTubers" or whatever other glorified name they are given were once a "normal" person.

Of course, YouTube has the tendency to create celebrities, but it also has the ability to break them down. I'm sure you have gone online to find videos of your least favorite politician just to watch them suffer and be humiliated. Your view counts. Every view that is on an embarrassing video to one celebrity/politician may end up destroying their reputation as an artist or whatever they are. This is what breaks many people down. The amount of power that a view count has is astonishing.

Does this make YouTube a weapon of mass chaos? Oh, praise be the Goddess, it does! So much can happen from one video to the next. One day you could be the most watched person and the next... well, you could be the laughingstock of the entire internet. And no one wants to be the butt of the joke.

Peace~!

YouTube--Our Culture in a Nutshell?

As someone who has a functional YouTube channel, I can say that I've had my fair share of the YouTube "blessing and curse". Not only that, but I find YouTube to be a very influential part of our society--and its power over our media is simply growing by the very day.

Entertainment, gaming, politics, and news coverage are four of the main things that people use to promote and express their ideas. To the "older folk", YouTube may be seen as evil--as a means of wasting our precious time. But is it really that bad?

No! YouTube is a place to make friends, get inspiration, and see what the world has to offer. Yeah, we use it to view cat videos and learn how to speak with giraffes, but really... this is a doorway to a future that could potentially lead to an open-minded, and (somewhat) educated world.

Wednesday, February 11, 2015

Cover Letter for Whoever

This is the link to my unedited cover letter. It still needs revision, but I believe that it will turn out alright once I've gotten a hold of the ropes.

Link to Google Doc

Monday, February 9, 2015

Tweeting-- Not Just for Birds

It's kind of awkward realizing how much social media is like potato chips... you can't have just one. As someone who was introduced to social media by Youtube and Facebook, I was skeptical of Twitter. Now that I've tried it out, I've realized that it's more addicting than I thought of it.

I'm hooked. If I don't return, then perhaps I've found a better place.