Does it prove that I don't give up? Probably.
I'm going to take this opportunity to show off the developments with my channel over the past 366 days. Yeah, did you forget it was a leap year? Hopefully I can nail these down in chronological order.
About a year ago I was still trying to poke into the gaming scene, with no sizable luck and the greatest achievement being a Beseige video that scored 1500 views. It was a one off, so while it felt good to have that accomplished, it was not a lasting one since it was not easily redone.
Soon after that I took a break from making YouTube videos and worked on building up a gaming rig with the whole idea of making a popular gaming channel with clearer and better quality product than the next guy. By the time I was able to get the gaming rig up and running, it was November and a few thousand dollars later.
During the summer, I found then-rising still-rising YouTube vlogger Casey Neistat and something clicked in me that said "that". There was an appeal to making videos about life, and about your view on the world. So I ditched the gaming channel idea that I had held for the last few months and was like "Yes, vlogging". I first invested $500 into the camera, and soon found the entire rig to be worth more than $1000 after SD cards, tripods, the $330 Shure VP83 microphone, and the rest of the setup that I used.
To date, the setup I use to make videos is valued at a "I earned that much & spent it!?" $5430 CAD (~$4160 US)
9 months ago, a posted a timelapse with my iPhone which has 93 views to date and I'm not sure why.
6 months ago, after the camera setup was completed, I made a video testing the camera and it got 165 views. Sometime around here, I changed my channel name from my forum alias here, to the name listed on all of my real identification. I completely ditched the idea of a lifeish-vlogger having an alias, it didn't seem right. So away it went.
Around that same time I posted a few videos that were really mostly about the view I have on YouTube success and how it should really be views, which the two videos collectively have about 200 views, both of them have more views than I have subscribers now (6 months later) and I never advertised them.
Since about 3 months ago, I've uploaded 36 videos, two of them don't seem to stop getting views, and one of them breached the 1,000 mark again without advertising. Within those 36 videos, I average 51% more views than I do subscribers.
I'm starting to take this game seriously, and I'm bringing my experiences with me to my first year of University.
Here's to another year, Freedom! family.
Nolan.
I'm going to take this opportunity to show off the developments with my channel over the past 366 days. Yeah, did you forget it was a leap year? Hopefully I can nail these down in chronological order.
About a year ago I was still trying to poke into the gaming scene, with no sizable luck and the greatest achievement being a Beseige video that scored 1500 views. It was a one off, so while it felt good to have that accomplished, it was not a lasting one since it was not easily redone.
Soon after that I took a break from making YouTube videos and worked on building up a gaming rig with the whole idea of making a popular gaming channel with clearer and better quality product than the next guy. By the time I was able to get the gaming rig up and running, it was November and a few thousand dollars later.
During the summer, I found then-rising still-rising YouTube vlogger Casey Neistat and something clicked in me that said "that". There was an appeal to making videos about life, and about your view on the world. So I ditched the gaming channel idea that I had held for the last few months and was like "Yes, vlogging". I first invested $500 into the camera, and soon found the entire rig to be worth more than $1000 after SD cards, tripods, the $330 Shure VP83 microphone, and the rest of the setup that I used.
To date, the setup I use to make videos is valued at a "I earned that much & spent it!?" $5430 CAD (~$4160 US)
9 months ago, a posted a timelapse with my iPhone which has 93 views to date and I'm not sure why.
6 months ago, after the camera setup was completed, I made a video testing the camera and it got 165 views. Sometime around here, I changed my channel name from my forum alias here, to the name listed on all of my real identification. I completely ditched the idea of a lifeish-vlogger having an alias, it didn't seem right. So away it went.
Around that same time I posted a few videos that were really mostly about the view I have on YouTube success and how it should really be views, which the two videos collectively have about 200 views, both of them have more views than I have subscribers now (6 months later) and I never advertised them.
Since about 3 months ago, I've uploaded 36 videos, two of them don't seem to stop getting views, and one of them breached the 1,000 mark again without advertising. Within those 36 videos, I average 51% more views than I do subscribers.
I'm starting to take this game seriously, and I'm bringing my experiences with me to my first year of University.
Here's to another year, Freedom! family.
Nolan.