making animation is not the same as making an actual movie
You're right. It's harder than making a movie. But as Tatsuki demonstrates, you can almost do it as a one-man-band (if you have a psychotic work ethic and cut corners like a chinese factory).
normie social media
You only need 4chan. Everything else is gravy and if you've got something good enough, everything else will fall in line.
You cannot compete with things like James Bond movies by getting donations from 4chan. What you've described is making a passion project, not a machine that can crush the enemy's hold on the industry.
You'd be better off getting an OnlyThot to bankroll your movie by telling her she can be in it and you'll make her famous. Probably get more money too, considering how rich those freaks are.
TI, I think I'm zeroing in on the problem in your thinking.
Have you ever heard of Dominic Cellini? He's a children's book illustrator. When I first ran across his art he had a few thousand followers on Instagram. Now he has 200k followers and his character Emmy the Robot Maid is the informal mascot of /k. I think he's working on a printed version, and possibly an anime. As far as I can tell, the entirety of his success hinged on having an interesting character and posting it on 4chan/c.
To you, this is immaterial. The idea that someone could self-make a media franchise with potential value in the hundreds of thousands or low millions is of no consequence because it has no societal impact.
You're impatient. You're not trusting in the consumer. You're not confident in the products you would offer. And more than anything else, YOU'RE USING OTHERS TO MEASURE YOUR OWN SUCCESS.
You're right. It's harder than making a movie. But as Tatsuki demonstrates, you can almost do it as a one-man-band (if you have a psychotic work ethic and cut corners like a chinese factory).
You only need 4chan. Everything else is gravy and if you've got something good enough, everything else will fall in line.
You cannot compete with things like James Bond movies by getting donations from 4chan. What you've described is making a passion project, not a machine that can crush the enemy's hold on the industry.
You'd be better off getting an OnlyThot to bankroll your movie by telling her she can be in it and you'll make her famous. Probably get more money too, considering how rich those freaks are.
SUCCESS IS NOT A ZERO SUM GAME.
TI, I think I'm zeroing in on the problem in your thinking.
Have you ever heard of Dominic Cellini? He's a children's book illustrator. When I first ran across his art he had a few thousand followers on Instagram. Now he has 200k followers and his character Emmy the Robot Maid is the informal mascot of /k. I think he's working on a printed version, and possibly an anime. As far as I can tell, the entirety of his success hinged on having an interesting character and posting it on 4chan/c.
To you, this is immaterial. The idea that someone could self-make a media franchise with potential value in the hundreds of thousands or low millions is of no consequence because it has no societal impact.
You're impatient. You're not trusting in the consumer. You're not confident in the products you would offer. And more than anything else, YOU'RE USING OTHERS TO MEASURE YOUR OWN SUCCESS.
Successful people don't do that.