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(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sswZeEjxiTQ)

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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via Instagram: @thenivenulls http://ift.tt/1pvLMHM Happy Easter from our āhard-to-take-pictures-ofā family to yours. šššš»
Marriage is hard enough. Add in public opinion and I honestly couldnāt deal. It takes one hell of a person to forgive a fuck up of that magnitude. I refuse to shame a person for wanting to keep her family together,especially if her spouse is actively working on forgiveness. I give Brit all the props in the world.
I hate cheaters. Nothing can make me feel bad or sympathy for people who cheat, online or psychically so when you have all these youtuber men coming forth and saying āyeah i cheated at x pointā it makes me lose absolutely all respect. From Jerry from the Lavignes to now Austin from the NiveNulls its just sad. Sad for their wifes and everyone (in their actual lives not viewers) else. Im really glad they can get counseling and work on their marriages though and put this behind them but i cant. they are disgusting shitty ass men. especially Austin who still rides the "im a good christian boy" train.
RE: Get Rich or Die Vlogging Article
Hey guys. I saw a bunch of YouTubers/media outlets talking about this article: http://fusion.net/story/244545/famous-and-broke-on-youtube-instagram-social-media/
Iād encourage you to read it first because they say more than Iāll address but I found it to be a slightly ridiculous article/outlook on life and oneself.
Let me start by saying that I 1) Donāt know the girl who wrote it and donāt know anything about her channel with her friend (other than what I see on her page/social blade stats) but I also have been in this industry a long time, worked in the business, have been inside a CMS, etc so I feel like the assessments Iām about to make are not too far off. 2) I donāt mean any harm by what Iām about to say and I actually hope that they can figure things out and be ācomfortableā as a result of their hard work. I just think that they are, most likely, already comfortable and donāt even know it.
Ok letās start at the beginning of the articleā¦she mentions a buzzfeed actress who has been in videos viewed MILLIONS AND MILLIONS of times who is serving tables at a buzzfeed event and feels awkward (apparently she ādeservesā to be at the event instead). I mean, that could be awkward, yeah, but financially itās totally normal. Sheās a hired actress for an Internet video. Thereās no massive budget (compared to tv/movie budget which equal tv/movie hired actress $) and also, the number of views on the video have no correlation to her pay, and most likely, performance. This is also the life (waiting tables, primarily) of EVERY ACTOR/ACTRESS IN LA TRYING TO MAKE IT. She finishes by saying, āWhy would someone with 90,000 Instagram followers be serving brunch?ā Wellā¦because they are normal humans who need to work. 90k followers makes you no better/more deserving than the other people serving brunch. It also means if some āfansā see you at work, you say hi and YES YOU DO TAKE A PICTURE IN YOUR UNIFORM IF THEY WANT ONE! (Unless youāll get fired or something) Moving onā¦
She mentions other YouTubers and their experience which I wonāt comment on because they each have varying degrees of success and I only want to focus on the channel of the girl writing this (who also claims to be struggling). However, she writes āMany famous social media stars are too visible to have ārealā jobs, but too broke not to.ā
This is a ridiculous statement (in 99% of cases). The people she mentions all have 300k subs or less. We have 300k subs and have lived in LA (aka the city where, I would hazard to guess, by most peopleās YT geo analytics, youāre most likely to get stopped) and Kansas City and never ONCE have I been swarmed or couldnāt go out in public. You can work a job and, assuming you donāt plaster the location or even actual workplace online, you should never have to worry about that. 300k people GLOBALLY means nothing for you to walk down Santa Monica Blvd.
Ok now letās address the section about her channel. She says shes āmakes money from ads that play before our videos, freelance writing and acting gigs, and brand deals on YouTube and Instagram.ā
Hey! So do we! Cool beans.
āBut itās not enough to live, and its influx is unpredictable. Our channel exists in that YouTube no-manās-land: Brands think weāre too small to sponsor, but fans think weāre too big for donations. Iāve never had more than a couple thousand dollars in my bank account at once. My Instagram account has 340,000 followers, but Iāve never made $340,000 in my life collectively.ā
Wait, what? You get (currently) like 3.4MM views a month (per social blade) and (looks like) 150k-200k views per video and BRANDS THINK YOU ARE TOO SMALL?! What brands are you talking to?! Hereās where Iāll mention a few numbers that are estimates but should not be far off (they can feel free to tell me Iām wrong and provide their actual numbers but itās none of our business, ultimately).
Letās say 3.5MM views per month. High end, thatās around $15k-$17k per month. Letās say, for the sake of argument, weāll cut that in half for the low end and say thatās $8k per month. Then thatās $4k for each of them.
They say their highest brand deal was for $6k (girls, please hit me up if thatās true. Iāll tell you about Social Blue Book and how you should charge no less than$10k for a small shout out and most likely $25k-$30k for a dedicated video, based on YOUR views. All estimates, of course, since I also donāt know your engagement levels) so letās say they do one brand deal a month for half that and they charge $3k and split it. Theyāre both individually making $5,500 a month at this point ON THE LOW END.
You mention the supply and demand problem (pertaining to brands and YouTubers) and thatās a real thing. You also mention your audience getting upset and thatās also a real thing. But thatās an obstacle of the job and you at least can appeal to authenticity of the Internet. Itās something weāve had to do. I literally tell people who get mad at us for working with brands, āHey, Iām just trying to buy diapers for my kids.ā Itās oversimplified, for sure, but itās also true. All I can say to that is be innovative. Itās something we all have to work on.
She talks a lot about not selling out and Iām totally on board with this. But you can also be true to yourself and work with a brand. The trick is establishing that YOU are in control, not the brand. They want you. They reached out to you. YOU ARE IN CONTROL. Sure, you have to meet basic guidelines but you tell them when theyāre idea wonāt work and that theyād be paying for terrible backlash and engagement if they try to force something on you. And brands aside, itās YOUR responsibility to communicate, authentically, to your audience how important a branded piece of content is. Authenticity isnāt lost on true supporters and if someone truly leaves because you do a branded video then why would you want them around in the first place?
Iāll finish by talking briefly about the tone of this article, which is what bothered me the most and I think is a pervasive thing within YouTube culture. Going back to the numbers I broke down earlier (again, estimates) you make a minimum of $5,500 per month and a maximum of possibly $10k per month EACH. That is NOT struggling. Sure, you probably have production costs (which can be avoided or thinned out since thatās part of the job to cut costs AND because itās YouTube and not tv) and taxes and costs of incorporating (trust me, I know that sucks) but you still are making more than what is considered middle class in America, basically. Youāre making more than 99% of your viewers most likely. Shoot, when I first moved to LA we made like $200 a month on YouTube and I had a $35,000 salary at the YouTube network I worked at and was providing for myself, my wife and our daughter and we were perfectly comfortable. IN LOS ANGELES, GUYS.
Honestly, after hearing the tone of self-pity throughout the article Iām not surprised you get hate for branded content. (I know it sounds harsh but itās most likely part of the problem. Sorry.)
This mindset is so pervasive in YouTube culture because numbers are peopleās IDOL and there is ALWAYS a bigger, better person than you. And it makes so many of us forget that what we have is WAYYYY better than what we used to have and we are blessed to have a job where we work for ourselves. Iāve done it before too. Iām guilty of it too at times. But we have to get over ourselves. Over the years Iāve come to believe that, although itās called YouTube, itās not about YOU at all. Itās about us. The community. And Iād argue itās more about serving your audience by expressing yourself creatively and authentically.
To the lady who wrote the article, I understand it can be tough and there are ALWAYS tough circumstances in life. I hope you can find what youāre looking for. However, Iād suggest you may already have a comfortable life if you step back and re-evaluate things and make small changes here and there. Take care.
-Austin

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
The Nive Nulls are the only family vloggers I think Iāll ever feel fully comfortable watching. Maybe itās just because Iām mixed lol
...but I do like that Austin is a woke white dude and that Brittany is teaching Audri and Kai to love their natural hair. <3Ā
YouTube OTPS & Couples: NiveNulls - Austin & Brittany Null