I could watch YouTube for hours on end...have, in fact. I don't want to see it "go Hollywood." To give awards and recognize with votes will only encourage contributors to work by formula for viewship, by popularity, and will eventually stifle the amateur creativity and kookiness that we have enjoyed 'til now. It will no longer be about finding those offbeat, isolated videos, or one-time submittors that share a chance or peculiar event. Those vids are made as a creative outlet for sharing more than to entertain. But as the opportunity for fame and money enter, vids slowly come to focus on a more professional look, with serial production and ongoing storylines, and predictability -- the stuff we that could have just watched on TV. The big ideas will come in to network and syndicate, and make money, and YouTube will lose its voyeuristic, private feel in favor of connectedness and mass appeal, which many don't want. YouTube should be kept the mess it has been -- an amateur-based,serendipitous, loosely organized pocket of entertainment.
Support the Althouse blog by doing your Amazon shopping going in through the Althouse Amazon link.
Amazon
I am a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for me to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.
Support this blog with PayPal
Make a 1-time donation or set up a monthly donation of any amount you choose:
2 comments:
(crickets chirping)
I'm not alone, it seems, in not caring about YouTube. It's okay to look at, but the signal to noise ratio is miniscule.
I could watch YouTube for hours on end...have, in fact. I don't want to see it "go Hollywood." To give awards and recognize with votes will only encourage contributors to work by formula for viewship, by popularity, and will eventually stifle the amateur creativity and kookiness that we have enjoyed 'til now. It will no longer be about finding those offbeat, isolated videos, or one-time submittors that share a chance or peculiar event. Those vids are made as a creative outlet for sharing more than to entertain. But as the opportunity for fame and money enter, vids slowly come to focus on a more professional look, with serial production and ongoing storylines, and predictability -- the stuff we that could have just watched on TV. The big ideas will come in to network and syndicate, and make money, and YouTube will lose its voyeuristic, private feel in favor of connectedness and mass appeal, which many don't want. YouTube should be kept the mess it has been -- an amateur-based,serendipitous, loosely organized pocket of entertainment.
Post a Comment