YouTubers navigate prickly digital world
YouTuber Dan Rodo has amassed millions of views on his channel
but knows he still needs way more.
It’s one of the reasons the Toronto-based producer partnered with Bell Media’s Much Digital Studios to create a slick new web series in which he challenges himself to upend his life in weird ways.
He chronicles gut-churning feats like eating only pizza for a week or struggling through his normal life while wearing a pair of Incredible Hulk gloves — all in the name of going viral.
Rodo, like many of Canada’s biggest YouTubers, came to realize that in the increasingly precarious digital economy, you’re only as good as your last hit video.
“I really like YouTube for what it is now, but it’s not going to last forever,” Rodo says.
“There’s been some big changes recently so you kind of have to roll with the punches.”
The Google-owned streaming website has kept its community of creators guessing with recent unexpected changes to advertising payouts.
YouTubers were shocked when its “restricted” setting began filtering out a wide variety of LGBTQ-friendly content for no clear reason — and without advance notification.
Then came a rash of exiting advertisers who fled the platform after seeing their ads running next to racist and extremist content.
The turmoil has calmed in recent months but gave YouTubers a moment of pause. Perhaps it was time to sharpen their skills as independent promoters of their own brands and not rely solely on the YouTube platform.
“YouTube is one of the best jobs I’ve ever had, but also one of the most stressful jobs,” Rodo says, “just because you never know what’s going to happen tomorrow.”
still uses YouTube as a distribution platform but it’s also bolstered by the Much brand, even if it doesn’t air on television. Visitors to Much.com see links to the series on the home page and the network’s social media accounts promote new content.
That backing worked for Jus Reign, the Guelph, Ont.-raised YouTuber who propelled his hobby of making comedy shorts into hosting red carpets at some of Much’s biggest events.
Transgender creator Stef Sanjati says she too was in negotiations with Much Digital Studios to help grow her audience on YouTube and beyond but decided to take a different route. She’s instead hired an agent to chase sponsorship deals with companies interested in using budding social media stars to draw attention.
Sanjati has plugged mobile apps, skin-care products and most recently a laser clinic’s treatments in her YouTube videos and on Instagram. “It’s tricky for me as someone who is more an artist than a business person, but it’s something I’ve been learning as I go,” she says.
Rodo agrees, but he’s particularly cautious about which brands he incorporates into videos. If it’s funny, then he’ll consider it. Last month, he interviewed his dog to plug the film and played a game of to promote a new pack of gum.
Other Canadians have proven it’s possible to break the YouTube celebrity mould in their own way.
Standing tallest is Lilly Singh, who racked up 11.5 million subscribers with colourful impersonations of her parents and guest spots by Bill Gates and Michelle Obama. While Singh’s debut book,
soared up bestseller lists, she says success in traditional media hasn’t weakened her confidence in the future of YouTube.
“I remember years ago there was this idea you had to get on YouTube so you could use it as a stepping stone to get visitors from Hollywood. I don’t feel that way,” she says. “I feel it is very much a space that will exist and grow.”
Singh left her east-Toronto neighbourhood for Hollywood two years ago in the hopes of solidifying from the La Jolla, Calif., home where he lived until his death in 1991 at age 87. Even his collection of 117 bowties is on display.
But by not referencing Geisel’s wartime work, which often stereotyped the Japanese, the museum is telling only half the story, said Katie Ishizuka, who has written on Geisel’s work.
Dimond never heard a prejudiced word out of Geisel, she said, and knows he had some regrets about the wartime work.
“If there is criticism of Ted, it has its place,” she said. “I would never try to, and he would not want any of us to try to, hide away anything he did. I know that he changed with the times.”
Richard Minear, a professor emeritus of Japanese history at the University of Massachusetts, who wrote about his political illustrations, says Geisel certainly had a blind spot on race, but it’s not fair to judge his entire career on that work.
“He matured and he developed a whole lot from those early years,” Minear said, noting that
was an allegory about post-war Japan and the nation’s relationship with the United States. a presence in the entertainment industry. But while she’s found a sweet spot that works south of the border, some U.S. YouTubers are headed north to build their name.
Lloyd Ahlquist, the U.S. co-creator of viral sensation
tapped into funding from the Ontario Media Development Corp., and the Independent Production Fund to bring his new YouTube series Epic Studios to life.
Ahlquist says that while others talk about leaving YouTube, he cherishes the freedom it allows. The Canadian Press