Cape Breton Post

Parents of YouTube stars on dealing with kids who want to skip school to stream

- BY MICHAEL OLIVEIRA

When people ask Michael Latsky about his kids he starts by proudly sharing that his eldest son is going to be a doctor. Then, with his head hung low, he’ll mutter that his youngest, Robert, dropped out of university to pursue his dream of becoming a “YouTube personalit­y.”

But it’s just a tongue-in-cheek act he plays for laughs. In reality, he’s proud that Robert - known online as MrWoofless for his video gaming content - discovered the “new economy” seven years ago. He no longer worries about whether he made the right choice.

“If you told me he should go back to school I wouldn’t stop laughing,” says Latsky, recalling a few milestones of success that convinced him his 26-year-old had chosen the right career path.

“One of them was that he seemed to have enough money to go to my money manager, and for the money manager to be very interested in carrying his account - that was one indication. I made him go to a money manager to make sure he was under control, because a 26-year-old with whatever income he’s making may not be able to psychologi­cally handle it.”

With the massive growth of YouTube in the last decade, including the emergence of bona fide online celebritie­s with tens of millions of fans, it should come as no surprise that more and more kids and teens are dreaming of a streaming career when they grow up. That’s forcing parents to grapple with the idea of their child forgoing a post-secondary education for their child’s online ambitions.

Latsky now understand­s the potential of the platform but wasn’t so sure seven years ago and had urged his son to reconsider dropping out of school.

“I was afraid. I was afraid if he left school and failed, where would he be?” he says.

“I sat down with him and I said, ‘That’s very nice what you’re trying to do - I don’t quite understand it - but I’m not paying for a cent towards anything you need starting from now unless you go back to school.’ My position was, if he’s not going to get a traditiona­l education, I’m not interested in (financiall­y) supporting him.

“It wasn’t as if I blackballe­d him and said, ‘Never talk to me again, I hate what you’re doing and you’re an idiot,’ it was just that I was more comfortabl­e with him being in school while he was doing it.”

It was a little easier for Marsha Hughes to understand when her son Mitchell officially chose not to go to university.

She recalls he was about 17 when the ad revenue he was generating for his Bajan Canadian online persona took off.

“He actually started to make money in 2010, when he got a cheque from YouTube for maybe a couple hundred dollars. And then the next month it was a couple thousand dollars - and then it went crazy. And that was just the beginning,” she recalls.

“We always just assumed that he’d go to college but when he was 18, in a couple months he actually made six-figures .... We realized that even if he did this for just a couple of years and invested the money wisely this was an opportunit­y that was once in a lifetime. He could go to college later.”

YouTube also became a family business with the launch of the management firm Blackshore about three years ago. Hughes, the company’s vice-president of talent, advises parents to try to convince their kids to stay in school unless they’re already making a large income. It’s getting increasing­ly difficult to stand out in the crowded YouTube universe, she adds, while the platform has also raised its standards for monetizing videos.

“There’s no guarantees and YouTube’s a funny world, there’s a lot of great content creators right now who aren’t doing that well and then you look at the ones who are doing well and it just doesn’t seem to make any sense,” she says.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Michael Latsky, right, plays a video game with his son Robert Latsky at his son’s office work space in Toronto on Thursday, May 3, 2018.
CP PHOTO Michael Latsky, right, plays a video game with his son Robert Latsky at his son’s office work space in Toronto on Thursday, May 3, 2018.

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