Someone in the gaming section the other day mentioned how Youtube was over once normies realized they could make money on it.
I agreed and elaborated. But I want to know something. That fake, overly enthusiastic, faggy way of talking they all do...how and why did they arrive there? How and why did the normies go "that....being a retarded faggot and talking like one...that's the gold rush boys!!!"
I want to know the progression.
When I was watching early youtube, the popular people had edge, were raw, and were usually ranty and negative, like most talking heads usually are, because that's far more entertaining to watch. A funny bitter guy like Anthony Cumia is 1000x more interesting than an Ellen Degeneras with her insincerity.
So what the heck made the faggy youtube voice/personality the golden ticket in the minds of normies? What was that pipeline that led there?
If you want the short answer, it’s women. Positivity and fake enthusiasm is the selling drive for the sahm and cat ladies and has been for decades (for example Oprah and all her copycats). Women drive 80% of consumer purchases and account for 78% of US social media accounts, they’re also far more likely to engage with brands on social media than men, so it’s not hard to see why companies and “personalities” all pander to the female demographic.
Indeed. I'd add that reality shows are another fine example of how some of this crap evolved. Create made up narratives and inject fake drama, capitalize on absolute cringe and "normalize" it.
And before that there was soap opera nonsense, but at least those took specific time slots and didn't cause nearly as much mayhem.
Yup. Even the teeth-gritting 'soy-grin' you seem in most fatfucks and numales is an attempt to be harmless and pander towards women.
Nailed it.
Women sitting around at home or in their private office at their bullshit corpo job binging social media all day.
Nailed it. The question is if it's sustainable or if [normie] women are going to ever burn out and develop the same jaded response to faux-hype that we have. Maybe if marketing can't keep the echo chambers airtight, some reality will sink in after a couple of generations. Maybe I'm overly optimistic.