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Why Do People Who Upload Videos About Thier Everyday Life On Youtube Seem So Fake

I upload video everyday on youtube?

Is uploding video everyday effect yesterday video views or will have no effects or will no damage yesterday video. How much time space should i give or one day is good

Are the videos shot and uploaded by Jaka Parker about North Korean every day life propaganda?

No there’s every reason to believe they are real and reflect everyday life in the parts of the country he was allowed to visit, if not the everyday life of the average North Korean. I’ve not been there myself but several of my friends and one colleague in my office right now have visited North Korea as tourists and reported similar scenes.Generally your North Korean “guide” will want to vet what photos and videos you take, but in the most picturesque spots they would actually encourage you to take photos. It appears he filmed most of his videos with a hidden camera, which was a risky move.I do not see why you think Youtube might want reject these videos. They do not seem to be politically loaded in any way, just a testimony of everyday life. It would be interesting to see how Youtube would react to a takedown request by the North Korean government. Probably something along the lines of:“Thank you for contacting us to voice concern about these videos. According to Youtube policy, we would normally make the video unavailable to viewers in your country, but it seems you’ve already taken care of that. Have a nice day.”

Which are your most / least liked YouTube personalities?

I could list a ton of YouTube personalities that I like and dislike. However, that could take all day, so I will just list a few.Pewdiepie - dislikeI dislike Pewdiepie not because he is the most popular YouTuber out there, but because his reactions seem too fake. Sure, you could argue that all of them fake their reactions in some way. However, I think Felix has become too caught up in the fame, he lost sight of where he came from, and who he used to be. I actually used to watch Pewdiepie back in 2012–2013, but then I stopped because I no longer found his content to be entertaining.2. iisuperwomanii - likeiisuperwomanii is, of course, on a different level than Pewdiepie. However, most channels that do skits, I could never find entertaining enough to make me want to stay, but iisuperwomanii has content that I actually find rather enjoyable. Her skits showcase what real life is like, and uploads ideas that regular, everyday people can enjoy. Her content may be on a different level than Pewdiepie; nevertheless, in my opinion, she is far more relatable than Felix.3. KSI - dislikeI'm going to be honest, I never really watched his content. Mostly because from what I've seen in the past, was all sports games. That type of content isn't something I am into, but there has to be a reason he's popular, right? I may give his content another shot, if I manage to get a reason as to why he's so popular.4. TheOdd1sOut - likeJames, a.k.a TheOdd1sOut, is a Youtuber I find most relatabe than everyone on this list. Only because his content (which, the majority are animations) are relatable in an entirety. He mentions in one of his videos that he came from a poor, average family lifestyle. That's something the majority of the world's population can relate to, right? He has uploaded videos about his job working in fast food, sharing his awful experiences and good experiences; which is another thing that most people can relate to. Overall, I think everyone should check out TheOdd1sOut at least once. And if it's not something you can relate to, you can move onto something better.I didn't want to write down a list of 20 people; however, if that is something that is designed, I would be more than happy to provide that list.

Are all of the ghost/alien/UFO "caught on tape" videos on YouTube fake?

UFOs may not be, but consider what UFO stands for. It’s not “Saucer-Shaped Ship Flown By Intelligent Alien”, it’s “Unidentified Flying Object” - Unidentified. IOW, “it’s something, but I don’t know what it is”. Weather balloons used to qualify (we don’t use them any more), swamp gas qualifies, a new stealth fighter not yet announced, but flying high enough to catch a glint of the sun, qualifies - even the ISS qualifies (very few people have actually seen the ISS and known that they were looking at the ISS - it doesn’t look like the pictures, it looks like a glint of light.)Aliens? I should write a book explaining the terrible economic inefficiencies of physically traveling 300LY, to find things you could find on the next planet out (in your own system). You don’t spend what would be more money and effort than we have … just to explore. Radio signals from Earth most likely haven’t had time to reach another civilization, even assuming that they had interstellar flight, so they wouldn’t know that we existed. On and on - there are so many reasons that aliens wouldn’t be coming here. And not a single reason they would.Ghosts? That’s part of the “What happens to me after I die” mystery. Something has to remain, right? I couldn’t just stop! Yes, that’s exactly what happens. You don’t “become a ghost”, you go back to being what you were before you were conceived - nothing. Nothing that left some rotting meat and some bones, but nothing. No ghosts. Ghosts are made-up things, because we can’t accept “when you did, you just stop being”.So, since we wouldn’t be seeing any ghosts or aliens, that leaves only UFOs, and while I’ve seen a few over the decades, that’s all they were - things in the sky, so evidently flying, objects but nothing I could identify. (Different parts of the sky, different shapes, different colors, different motions each time - so probably unconnected.)

How do some youtube channels blow up so fast?

I have a YouTube channel and own a few blogs (my gaming blog)If it’s not fake, which can sometimes be the case then it comes down to these things:Viral Mystery Effect: If your content leaves mistery, it gets clicks.People use this to go viral, you may have seen it with 1000 degree knife cutting stuff or The Slow Mo Guys.Titles that start with: “What happens when you…?”Mix that with a nice thumbnail and you have viral magic.Know other YouTubers: If you get involved with one of the many clicks on YouTube you can go from 0 to breaking your first 1 mil subs in 6 months.They get famous on another platform and bring it to YouTube.Examples:Ozzy Reviews (got famous on Facebook)The Gabby Show (got famous on vine)The list goes on.They use good marketing: Tai Lopez - Alex Becker - And many other YouTubers use SEO and marketing to get to the top.This takes a big budget, keyword research and great content and can backfire.They find an untapped niche: Recently life hacks went crazy and a few YouTubers went from 2000 subs straight into the millions within weeks.Here’s an example: This guy went from 0 to over 6 million subscribers in a year: My GearHope this helped, if you have any questions feel free to ask.

Is it possible to get 50,000 subscribers in a year on a Youtube channel?

Everything that you put in your mind is possible.YouTube has a few hidden rules, but they seem to work all the time.Consistency ruleUploading videos on a regular basis will tell YouTube that you're serious, and it will start promoting you. It can be 1 video every 3 days or 1 video every 2 weeks. If you maintain a fixed schedule (or upload many videos) it will help you gain more visibility, views, subscribers, and revenue (ads).100 Subscriber RuleAs soon as you hit 100 subscribers, something in YouTube's algorithm will be triggered and you will start getting more traffic to your channel.100 Video RuleAs soon as you hit 100 videos and you already have 100+ subscribers on YouTube, you will get even more exposure.YouTube is something exponential, and YouTube rewards hardworking people.TipsThe Internet is full of websites, Social Media platforms, and people willing to look at your stuff. However, competition is what makes it difficult to do it. Here's what you should do:Upload a video once or twice a week.Write blog posts, guest posts, look for free traffic websites to tell the world about it.Pay for advertising (YouTube ads) to get your first 100 subscribers.Make every new video better than the previous one.Save some money to purchase quality video gear ($600 for a DSLR, $100 for an action camera, $100-$500 for a lavaliere microphone, $100 for a PC microphone, tripods, accessories, etc.)Create stunning custom thumbnails (learn Photoshop skills)Create stunning video effects (Adobe After Effects & Premiere Pro)Create giveaways (an iPad, an Amazon gift card, etc.)Cooperate with other similar YouTube channels.Be patientIf you don't know how to do it, learn. The Internet is full of free and paid tutorials on how to do it.If you do carefully everything I have mentioned here, you can do it.Make sure to create better videos, work every single day on your dream.I constantly see lots of valuable YouTube channels which started 1-2 years ago and surpassed 1M subscribers. One such channel which I enjoy is Top 5s. Stunning content, great quality, started from scratch in 2014 and now he has 1.2M subscribers.I talk about everything related to cars.Here's my channel - 99VehiclesTV

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