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was expecting more to be honest

1000 million views ent no joke

i thought people made "decent money" off of say 500k views but i guess not.

 

If someone is getting 500k views a week for a video, he is making more than decent money (depending what you see as decent money)   2 videos a week = 1k   

 

You're getting 4k a month, you are living nice.    Some of these guys can throw money to people and it will have no affect on them they are making so much money.   Some youtube guys have already made over a mil.  Some guys have enough to get them on the property ladder.   Some guys are buying brand new mercs and paying for their parents mortgage :lol:

 

 

Nah Gangnam Style made like 900k dollars from YouTube income. that includes everyone's parody videos as well. Most the profit comes from performances.

 

The video made double that.   If it was me that uploaded that video, i would have over a million dollars.   Youtubers with over 1 mil subs don't get what someone like i would get.  Obviously, i don't know how much the guy would get as we don't know what rights he owns to that song.

 

 

Remember the parents of the "charlie bit my finger" video doing the rounds on media around a year ago, said they had earned £100k from around 400million views.

 

The video itself should of made them more.   If they did only earn 100k it's cause they wasn't partners to begin with and only started profiting after it went viral.

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Hes balling, last bit of the vid was good, fully grateful.

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I really dislike modern apartments, so soul-less

The views tho >>>

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Disagree with who ever said Ratlins views on Link Up tv are fake he has a strong road buzz 300K views is about right wen some people will listen to any artist because of their street rep and he knows how to make songs not just bars but hooks, he isn't bummy in his videos he presents himself well

Ah beg someone ban this guy

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What YouTube superstar Zoella reveals about teenage girls (and how it's left her smiling all the way to the bank), writes SARAH VINE

By Sarah Vine for the Daily Mail

Published: 23:22, 23 November 2014 | Updated: 23:29, 23 November 2014

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Zoe 'Zoella' Sugg has more than six million subscribers on YouTube, where her video blogs - 'vlogs' - attract 12 million hits a month

Her book hasn't even gone on sale yet, and — thanks to the scale of pre-orders — already it's number three on the Amazon Bestseller chart.

She has more than six million subscribers on YouTube, where her video blogs — 'vlogs' — attract 12 million hits a month. She has her own range of bath and beauty products, which sold out within ten hours of hitting the shelves at Superdrug.

She's just won a Radio 1 Teen Award for the second year running, and she features in the November issue of Vogue. And last week she joined Sir Bob Geldof and his pop-star do-gooders on the chorus of Band Aid 30.

And yet I'll wager you've almost certainly never heard of her. Unless, that is, you happen to be aged 11-17, in which case she's, like, totes amazeballs and awesome, or words to that effect.

Let me enlighten you. Her name is Zoella, she's 24, lives in Brighton and is said to have earned £300,000 in one year thanks to her fame on the internet. You see, advertisers will pay good money to appear on a site such as Zoella's.

She also has a boyfriend, two guinea pigs and a legion of devoted, adoring tweenage fans. She has her fair share of detractors, too, but I'll come to them later.

For now, let us remain in Zoella-land. What do we see? A wide-eyed slip of a girl. A bedroom full of fairy lights and scented candles. Great teeth, even greater hair and a friendly, chirpy manner. She's possibly the closest a human being has ever come to being a basket of kittens.

Her videos — mostly beauty-related, but lately more general lifestyle-orientated — are light and fluffy, her manner self-deprecating.

'Hi guys,' she chirrups, all smiles and dimples. No reason why you should be interested in little old me, she says, before launching into a 15-minute monologue about her favourite things.

Here she is in Asda with her boyfriend, shopping for Halloween stuff (1.5 million views). Here she is with her little brother, equally blue-eyed and bouncy, generally being silly.

Her most-watched video — a hair tutorial consisting of variations on a ponytail — has been seen by more than 7.5 million people.

There's a darker side to her, too — only not too dark, obviously — this is, after all, Zoella. She suffers from panic attacks. They started when she was 14, and they tend to come on in crowded places.

When she vlogs about them, a disclaimer comes up apologising: 'If you have clicked on this for five minutes of happy time, you will be disappointed,' it says (2.6 million views).

Scroll down for video 

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The beauty blogger's boyfriend, Alfie Deyes, 21, is a web celebrity in his own right and has 3.2 million followers on his Pointless Blog

She cries a little and you feel sorry for her, this wisp of a girl with tiny, bird-like wrists and big, watery eyes. The mental health charity, Mind, has rather cleverly made her one of their ambassadors. 'If my talking about this stuff makes even one of you guys feel better,' she says, 'then I'm 100 per cent happy.'

On the face of it, then, a fluffy but inoffensive soul. Just a bubbly young girl being herself. No sleaze-ball manager or multi-national entertainment machine pulling her strings, no greedy manager to bully her or ply her with drugs and alcohol. 

Just your average girl-next-door/sympathetic big sister, a modern-day Jennifer Aniston type, all bouncy hair and bright eyes. What harm can she possibly do?

Plenty, it would appear. Because there are many out there — from trolls to mainstream commentators, who consider her very existence an affront.

'Her particular brand of sickly-sweet girl power brings me out in hives,' fulminated one female columnist a few weeks ago in a national tabloid. Cue Twitter storm, as her millions of fans stepped in to defend her.

Zoella should use her influence to press home a more serious message, her critics argued back, instead of wasting her popularity on tips about eyeliner and hairspray. She should strive to become the 'face of accessible, digestible feminism'.

Such has been the backlash against her that the girl herself, whose real name is actually Zoe Sugg, has gone to ground.

When I approach her for an audience, I get a curt message back from her 'people' at the agency Gleam Futures, which manages the careers of the growing number of internet celebrities.

The single line response simply says: 'I'm afraid Zoe's not doing any more media this side of Christmas.'

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She is best known for her perky fashion and shopping vlogs while her brother Joe Sugg goes by the moniker ThatcherJoe does celebrity impressions

Could it be that our fresh-faced little pixie has morphed into a bit of a diva? Or is she genuinely overwhelmed by it all? Could it be that this online success story is turning into a cautionary tale about the effects of fame on a young mind? Or is it a clash of two cultures, the old media vs the new?

Watching her videos, it's clear that her core appeal is very similar to that of any other famous-for-being-famous celebrity: she is Everygirl, only just that little bit glossier.

And she is unapologetic about her interests: friends, make-up, guinea pigs and boyfriend.

That boyfriend is Alfie Deyes, 21, a web celebrity in his own right, only he prefers to post footage of silly dares and impressions.

His appropriately named Pointless Blog has 3,200,000 followers — about half that of Zoella's. However, Alfie's own recently launched tome, The Pointless Book, is currently at number one on the Sunday Times bestsellers list, having sold 120,500 copies after 11 weeks in the Top 10.

At a signing back in September he was mobbed by 8,000 screaming fans at the Waterstones in London's Piccadilly Circus, forcing organisers to cancel his book tour over health and safety fears.

Alfie's subsequent 'meet and greets' were held in the spacious ExCel Exhibition Centre, where fans queued from 4am to meet their hero. So I guess you could say Alfie does OK for himself.

The pair, effectively the Posh and Becks of the British video blog world, live in a £935,000, five-bedroom house in Brighton. The electric gates at the front of the property were a must, apparently, because Zoella's fans have been known to ring her doorbell day and night in the hope of meeting their idol.

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The blogger (far right, bottom row) appeared in Band Aid 30 along with Ed Sheeran and Ellie Goulding 

So who is she and where does she come from? Before becoming an online superstar, she grew up in sleepy Lacock, Wiltshire, the daughter of a property developer father and beautician mother.

After leaving the local Corsham School with A-Levels in art, photography and textiles, she opted for an apprenticeship at an interior design company and started blogging five years ago. Clearly she found an untapped niche, and Zoella's star has been in the ascendant ever since.

But why is Zoella so immensely popular with young girls today? As the mother of one myself, I think I have some understanding as to why they all love her so.

It's precisely because she isn't pushing a political agenda, or tackling 'serious' subjects such as FGM or equality or any of the other issues that so obsess us grown-ups. Zoella is a little bubble of pure happiness and joy, a refuge for when the world outside seems scary and complicated.

She herself knows this, hence the disclaimer on the serious stuff. Chewing-gum she may be; but sometimes chewing gum is what a girl needs.

Being a teenage girl is an exhausting and turbulent time. All kinds of pressures are bearing down upon you, from parents, teachers, boys. Sometimes all you want to do is lock yourself in your room and pretend to be a little girl again; to have nothing in your happy little head except guinea pigs and pony-tails.

That is the genius of Zoella: her videos are the ultimate girl-time. In many of them she jokes and plays around with her best friend, who is also a blogger.

Together they muck around, talk nonsense, try lipstick on each other. It's not complicated or sophisticated — it's just a bit of fun.

Which is not to say that her followers are all dimwits. I should know — I live with one of them.

My daughter is 11 and has views on practically everything, from religion to politics. But, like all her school friends, she is 'really into Zoella'.

When the preview copy of her book, Girl Online, with its baby blue cover festooned with fairy lights, arrived, she was 'like, super excited'. She loves Zoella's bubble bath, even though to me it smells like Lucozade.

As one young fan, a girl who's been following her since the beginning, and who practically grew up with Zoella, said to me: 'Why does everyone assume we'll all be militant feminists? We can't all be like Malala. Just because we like make-up doesn't mean we're stupid, or not interested in other stuff. Some of us are quite comfortable with both.'

This is interesting. Because Zoella, either by luck or through instinct, has somehow tapped into something fundamental about this generation of young girls. The Department for Education last week released new figures about the mental and emotional whereabouts of the current generation of secondary school children. And it's not at all what you might have expected.

Teenagers have always been a tricky lot, expressing themselves through the counter-culture, be that clothes, hair, sex, music or drugs. But these figures reveal something truly shocking: today's teenagers are square.

That's right: square. They enjoy school, love spending time with their families, live healthy, productive lifestyles. There has been a marked decline in risky behaviour, such as alcohol and cigarette consumption. At the same time, however, more of them report 'mainly spending time by themselves'. Many say they never go out. Nearly half of girls — 47 per cent — and 30 per cent of boys reported using social networking or instant messaging sites 'throughout the day'.

To someone of my vintage — one who couldn't wait to get out there and grab the world by the scruff of its neck — this seems a bit sad at first. What's wrong with them all?

In truth, though, it's just a new kind of rebellion, a kick against the establishment every bit as vicious as that delivered by The Beatles or punk. The only difference is that we don't feel it so keenly because it's happening in a different dimension from the one we inhabit.

This is the first generation to have grown up with the internet as ordinary. For them, it's not just another communication tool, a new way to access or share information with a pre-existing group of friends — it is an extension of their reality.

I'll give you an example: I grew up speaking two languages, English and Italian. But in my head, they are one and the same. I don't differentiate between them at all.

That's not because I'm some kind of linguistic genius; it's just that I learned to speak them both during my formative years.

Today's youngsters have a similar thing: there is no mental barrier between the physical world and the virtual one. To them, there is genuinely no difference between sitting opposite someone on the bus and talking to them via a laptop screen.

So, while to you and I sitting on our beds watching someone curl their hair may seem like the most inane activity on the planet, to someone like my daughter and her friends it's like having a friend over. They all chat about it afterwards via What's App, or whatever the latest platform is — and for them it's as good as being there. They simply don't know any different.

In some ways, this is the biggest teenage rebellion we've ever witnessed: the kids have given up trying to change the old world, and have just gone to live somewhere else altogether. All without leaving the comfort of their own bedrooms. Scary, when you think about it.

Zoella is just a massive on-line girl crush, as we used to say in the olden days. Moreover, she is squeaky clean.

To retain your integrity online — where pornography thrives, where every other pop video seems choreographed to be as demeaning as possible towards young women and where the fastest route to success and global stardom is, let's face it, to show everyone your bottom — is quite an achievement.

Millions of followers, and the only bit of nudity is Zoella's make-up-free face at the start of her tutorials.

In this brave new world that today's teenagers are creating, there is no sex and violence, no drink and drugs, no self-destruction. Girls don't demean themselves, boys don't swagger around like rap stars and pimps.

Boys and girls respect each other. There are clear boundaries between the private and the public. It's about friendship, kindness and understanding. In its own way, it's a kind of Utopia. And like all Utopias, it's not real.

But that doesn't mean it's bad. It's just that when a world such as the one created by Zoella and her happy band of friends and followers comes into contact with reality, the mixture is bound to curdle. In the face of mainstream fame, Zoe Sugg has lost her innocence. Cynicism and jealousy are poisoning her wellspring of happiness. It's a shame, but it's called growing up, and it happens to all of us sooner or later.

When I watch my own daughter, doing pirouettes in the living room, playing with her guinea-pig, free of the worry of burden, I give thanks for the Zoellas of this world. Because if that silly, smiley, candy-floss girl can prolong my own daughter's innocence, shield her for one more minute from grim reality, then that's fine by me. After all, she's got the rest of her life to be miserable.

 

 

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is there any vlogs out there with just youth disscusing current affairs/topics

 

and iam not talking jump off tv style

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