Hardest experiences - YouTuber Video Transcripts
Video 1 Transcript
I think some of the hardest times are when we put in a ton of effort into a video. We spend weeks and and lots of money and we plan out this epic video and we put our heart and soul into it and if it doesn't perform well on YouTube and it doesn't get a lot of views and it doesn't do very good that's like heartbreaking. It's definitely one of the hardest things to deal with as a creator is to put your heart out there and and it doesn't doesn't get the views you expect. Definitely the hardest part in my opinion.
Video 2 Transcript
For one of our channels, we do a lot of editing. Really a lot of editing. We try to cut the scenes to the music and time everything really amazingly. So one of the hardest things for us is just the time it takes to edit, and I've tried to cut down on that. You know, we've quit because of burnout a lot of times. It takes a lot of time if you let it, and if you get imbalanced. Yeah, it can actually throw you for a loop if you're not careful. You have to really keep things in balance. Make sure that you don't think of yourself as a YouTuber. You've got to be a human being first, and a husband and a father, you know, whatever your family role is. Family, religion, and social life in real life first, and then you happen to YouTube.
Video 3 Transcript
I think some of the hardest experience I've had as a YouTuber are the ups and downs. Like one month you might get twice the amount of views as you get and then like the next month you might get half as many views or a third as many views and so it's kind of an emotional roller coaster and I've had periods of time on my YouTube channel where I've published like every day for like a few months and like not seen any growth and that can be kind of hard you want to keep on publishing daily without seeing growth. So it takes a lot of grit, a lot of determination, a lot of commitment and you gotta kind of stick with it but I think it's totally worth it because how many people can say that like they can live off of passive income without even working if they don't want to but YouTube allows you to do that if you stick with it and you really work at it. Also you have to have a thick skin as a YouTuber because there's lots of mean comments.
Video 4 Transcript
So one of the hard things about YouTube for me is when I start something that I kind of do on a whim and I like the idea for a bit and then realizing I need to kind of cut the cord. I've heard from actors or people in film, like people who write scripts, the hardest part is like editing out their favorite part of the film that just can't quite fit in and on a similar vein on the YouTube side. Like I said, I have, well, I have probably nine or 10 channels having to stop a few of those that I kind of do enjoy, but realize that they're just not going to work long-term or I'm not going to be able to put into it what I want to. That for me is pretty hard. And it's also hard when you kind of create something that you think will be well-received and it isn't, but moving forward, keep moving forward.
Video 5 Transcript
When it comes to the hardest experiences I've had on YouTube, I would have to say that one of them is learning that I am a people pleaser and that I was literally trying to please the world and if you've ever read the comment section of YouTube videos, you would know that it is completely impossible to do that. Some people love you, some people hate you and I've never been okay with people not liking me and so it's been really, really difficult to try to learn how to not be a people pleaser and also be a YouTuber and I only learned that because I started to edit my life before I would ever film it. So I just wouldn't film certain things because I knew that it might not please everyone and that was really a bad thing for me. So I ended up, now I'm learning how to unapologetically be me and still have standards and not please everyone.