Although I have not watched a lot of Hasan videos , I think he is not actually leftist ! He is liberal at best , posing to be leftist ?

  • joaomarrom [he/him, comrade/them]
    ·
    1 year ago

    Maybe veering a bit off-topic here, but what does he do? I mean, what does a streamer actually do aside from play games on stream? Does he like talk about politics while gaming, or do people just tune in to hear him speak randomly? I'm getting old.

    • Red Wizard 🪄@lemmygrad.ml
      ·
      1 year ago

      He streams on average like 12 hours a day, almost 7 days a week. The majority is news coverage from a left perspective, mostly US News, sometimes he will play currently trending games he's interested in once news is done, or do react content be it political or something else.

      He's recently live streamed his participation in the SAG/AFTRA strike with Adam Conover, and had several strikers on stream (including Adam) to talk about the strike. He had the Union leader for the Amazon Labor Union on not long after they won their union.

      He's definitely a "personality". Some show up for the news, some only show up for the games, some show up because he's a himbo. They all end up exposed to a left perspective at some point. He averages 30K concurrent viewers, as high as 60K to 100K if something big is happening in the news. So he has a good amount of reach. Not everyone there shares his world view, but more then 0 percent do get their views changed.

      • joaomarrom [he/him, comrade/them]
        ·
        1 year ago

        Interesting. I wonder how people get to that point, you know? Nobody would tune in to watch Mr. Joaomarrom rambling on twitch. What does it take to make people want to hear what I have to say, to the point where they're actively giving me money for my opinions?

        I suppose the same could be asked about any podcast or any public figure. Man I wish people would just pay to watch me speak to the computer.

          • SerLava [he/him]
            ·
            1 year ago

            Yeah I've realized lately that opening a Twitch account and pointing a camera at yourself is for suckers. Obviously a couple people succeeded from that, but hardly anyone. Mostly absolute baddies btw

            I kind of wanted to stream games a few years ago but I realized it's really such a waste of time for the audience, which is why they don't watch you. If you are insanely good at whatever you're doing, people might watch you to witness the prowess. If you aren't insanely good, you're asking people to watch you for 8 hours so that they can see one hilarious thing spontaneously happen for 10 seconds. It's not worth it! That's shit entertainment.

            So at that point I created a tiktok and started posting just the 10 second clips. People like that. I just play games with OBS running and slam F8 when something interesting happens. And then go trim and edit the video later. Everyone saves so much time that way. Sometimes I'll intentionally produce a video, but that's like 5-10% of my videos.

            Now if I wanted to stream I would have a huge advantage over someone just starting out - if I published a video saying I'm about to stream, it probably wouldn't perform very good at all, maybe 500 views, and maybe 10 people would click through to the stream, and maybe some of my followers would have the stream pop up in their tiktok feed, so maybe I'd get 15, 20, 50 people tops. As opposed to starting a Twitch and having 0, 1, or 2 viewers for literally months. That's such a dramatically easier starting position

            • YEP [he/him]
              ·
              1 year ago

              Part of the argument is depending on the game doing people just stream the time they are farming clips for tiktok like you do. And twitch viewers represent a much larger amount of $ per viewer. $ per viewer is such a slimy way of framing it. Also it can be fun idk I streamed for a bit to like 5-20 people for a couple months. I was chilling between semesters but it was chill idk.

              • SerLava [he/him]
                ·
                edit-2
                1 year ago

                Oh yeah I don't wanna bash that at all, I'm really only talking about trying to launch it as a job, which many people do, and also just doing that and not having a clip channel outside of twitch.

                TikTok and YouTube Shorts are the absolute worst for making money, you can literally only make good money if you have a mass-appeal mindless video channel on there, and you're incredibly skilled and lucky, but they're good for getting followers and viewers