I think some niche youtube channels are fun, but it certainly is becoming a bore. If I had to guess, it probably is from everything being localized to a handful of websites and those are in turn optimized by an algorithm for profit instead of something enjoyable. The internet has been turned into what is addictive instead of fun.
My personal theory is that we are so detached from joy that many find “reaction videos” a source of amusement because we can’t feel excitement ourselves anymore, so people vicariously enjoy something “new” by watching someone else be very excited and happy about it.
I only really partake in interacting with people I don’t know on Hexbear, and anything else I leave exclusive to people I know in real life.
Its a fantastic reservoir of knowledge at your fingertips, but a terrible and inhuman way to interact with other humans. Much nuance and body language is not seen, and people essentially develop the same kind of anonymous rage they feel when driving a car except it is in front of a computer screen.
It sucks that I get nothing from such videos. I do enjoy experiencing things directly, and I even enjoy reviews or no-commentary no-selfie-video playthroughs of some games, but as soon as it’s about making faces I’m out.
Don’t get me wrong; I like some Youtube content, including narrated reviews and no commentary playthroughs of games, but as soon as I see that a portion of the screen is a perpetual face to tell me how I should feel every second of the video, even if I’d otherwise like the content, I’m out.
Criken2 comes to mind. I found his stuff hilarious until he started doing that format.
I was watching some South Asian villagers react to the star wars prequels just before reading this comment because I find them so wholesome, I guess, even though who can say how genuine their reactions are. I don’t usually watch reaction videos but, at the time, there was nothing else I would rather be doing.
Reaction videos are an occasional guilty pleasure of mine. But I avoid channels that are explicitly about “reactions” because as UlyssesT said, they end up all being the same reaction to different things.
I do genuinely enjoy seeing people be excited and happy. But so much of that “industry” is fake. People either go over the top or provide nothing in addition.
I think some niche youtube channels are fun, but it certainly is becoming a bore. If I had to guess, it probably is from everything being localized to a handful of websites and those are in turn optimized by an algorithm for profit instead of something enjoyable. The internet has been turned into what is addictive instead of fun.
My personal theory is that we are so detached from joy that many find “reaction videos” a source of amusement because we can’t feel excitement ourselves anymore, so people vicariously enjoy something “new” by watching someone else be very excited and happy about it.
I only really partake in interacting with people I don’t know on Hexbear, and anything else I leave exclusive to people I know in real life.
Its a fantastic reservoir of knowledge at your fingertips, but a terrible and inhuman way to interact with other humans. Much nuance and body language is not seen, and people essentially develop the same kind of anonymous rage they feel when driving a car except it is in front of a computer screen.
It sucks that I get nothing from such videos. I do enjoy experiencing things directly, and I even enjoy reviews or no-commentary no-selfie-video playthroughs of some games, but as soon as it’s about making faces I’m out.
idk, it sounds like that might be a superpower. “congratulations! you are now immune to parasocial relationships”
at least it’s not ever-growing nose hairs or something
Don’t get me wrong; I like some Youtube content, including narrated reviews and no commentary playthroughs of games, but as soon as I see that a portion of the screen is a perpetual face to tell me how I should feel every second of the video, even if I’d otherwise like the content, I’m out.
Criken2 comes to mind. I found his stuff hilarious until he started doing that format.
I was watching some South Asian villagers react to the star wars prequels just before reading this comment because I find them so wholesome, I guess, even though who can say how genuine their reactions are. I don’t usually watch reaction videos but, at the time, there was nothing else I would rather be doing.
Reaction videos are an occasional guilty pleasure of mine. But I avoid channels that are explicitly about “reactions” because as UlyssesT said, they end up all being the same reaction to different things.
I do genuinely enjoy seeing people be excited and happy. But so much of that “industry” is fake. People either go over the top or provide nothing in addition.