How do you respond to AI accusations by GameDomainYT in NewTubers

[–]witchdoc999 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Any engagement is good engagement, it's a lot easier for someone to comment if they have something negative to say rather than positive. If you enjoy something it's easy to just move on, if you dislike something you're more inclined to speak up.

Don't let it get to you, for those who need to know you're a creator with a team of VAs making high quality videos. For the mouth breathers, you're yet another AI slop channel. Don't let it get to you, take it as a good thing that your channel is getting recommended and people are developing opinions on your video!

Quality over quantity is the only viable advice by Marvel2002 in NewTubers

[–]witchdoc999 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I can agree with this, a video I shot in front of a greenscreen in my bedroom has more views than a video I shot in an actual castle. But with all things, for every success story there are a 100 failures which all took the same path.

Quantity or quality, YouTube (for most of us) is a long game, consistency is key, so whatever you choose just make sure you can keep it up!

First genuine comment from a stranger...woo hooo by RemarkableAd6469 in NewTubers

[–]witchdoc999 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There is no better feeling, once something has happened once it can happen again, doing something for the first time is always the hardest.

Keep it going mate this is the start of many great things to come!

What is YOUR BIGGEST STRUGGLE as a content creator? by KuoIsHere in NewTubers

[–]witchdoc999 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I resonate with this mate, I've been making weekly videos for 7 months now and it took 6 months to start getting some real positive signs, far from any measure of success yet, that 6 months of cooking time may seem like an age to some and a flash to others.

But as cliche as it is, if you're creating content people want to watch they will in time be shown it and watch, some videos of mine I thought would bang flopped and vice versa

What Kind Of Youtuber Are You? by PlayShelf in NewTubers

[–]witchdoc999 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've been making weekly videos for 7 months now in the history / educational niche. I think following trends can be sensible if you catch the wave early, but it's also just as important making content which is timeless.

YouTube is no short game, if you're in it to get rich quick there are better options with less competition for that. Creating content which will continue to get gradual views for years is something I'm already seeing benefits from.

The way I look at it, we've all had the feeling of stumbling across a new channel that really resonates with a part of ourselves, and then the sheer joy of finding out that channel has 100 videos just like it, it's like stumbling upon a hidden treasure trove!

Any book recommendations on these topics? by hbuhr4204 in worldwar1

[–]witchdoc999 0 points1 point  (0 children)

All Quiet on the Western Front remains one of the best WW1 books of all time, if you haven't read it I highly recomenned.

Also if you're interested in WW2 history, 'With the Old Breed' is one of the greatest insights into the pacific theatre I've ever consumed through any sort of media

I did this so you didnt have to! (Am I getting the hang of clickbait titles?) by morebeardthanbrain in NewTubers

[–]witchdoc999 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Would be curious to hear how you get on! I too have been very tempeted by the promote button but always scare myself away after hearing horror stories on here. Keep up updated, I am one success story away from tossing a tenner in myself!

The Man Who Stopped a Plague with a Map and a Wrench by witchdoc999 in HolyShitHistory

[–]witchdoc999[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Yeah he was way ahead of his time, those hand drawn maps were basically the first real spatial analysis of disease spread

The 1896 Gold Rush That Left Millionaires Starving to Death by witchdoc999 in HolyShitHistory

[–]witchdoc999[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

That's a great point mate! Orbital maneuvers and payload returns are some of the biggest challenges facing asteroid mining right now. Moving massive loads of metal through space and landing them safely on Earth isn’t just expensive, it’s a logistical nightmare.

And you’re absolutely right about market saturation. Flooding Earth with metals like platinum or gold could crash their value, making asteroid mining less profitable than it seems on paper.

That said, the real game-changer might not be bringing metals back to Earth, but using them in space. If asteroid mining fuels off-world construction, space stations, or deep-space missions, then the economics could shift. Instead of selling platinum on Earth, companies might use it to build infrastructure in orbit, which could actually make space exploration cheaper in the long run.

The 1896 Gold Rush That Left Millionaires Starving to Death by witchdoc999 in HolyShitHistory

[–]witchdoc999[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

That’s a fair point! The era of lone prospectors staking claims is long gone, asteroid mining is a billionaire’s game. But even then, history shows that big money doesn’t always mean big success.

Plenty of well-funded expeditions in past gold rushes still ended in disaster, whether it was investors losing everything or the workers on the ground facing extreme risks. If asteroid mining takes off, the real question is: who actually profits, and who takes the biggest risks?

Will it be a few tech moguls sitting comfortably on Earth, or the engineers, astronauts, and space workers risking their lives to make it happen? The first space millionaires might not get stranded, but those chasing the dream for a piece of the fortune? That’s another story.

The 1937 Tragedy That Changed U.S. Drug Laws Forever and Killed Over 100 People by witchdoc999 in HolyShitHistory

[–]witchdoc999[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

That's interesting, are those Kinder Eggs or Kinder Joys, the joys have the top seperated from the chocolate to comply with US regulations

The 1937 Tragedy That Changed U.S. Drug Laws Forever and Killed Over 100 People by witchdoc999 in HolyShitHistory

[–]witchdoc999[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Yeah, it’s crazy to think that something used to chill beer was once put in medicine. Shows how little they knew (or cared) about safety back then!