Users objected to the Complex Systems Podcast returning with a YouTube microeconomics episode because they strongly dislike video production and prefer writing or audio formats.
Based on 1 visible X reactions from 2 accounts; directional sample.
Ask a question below.
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Personally I hate producing video with a passion unmatched by a thousand burning suns. I’m a writer first and then do podcasts as a side business which (for reasons alluded to) monetizes surprisingly well. But if The Kids (TM) are formed by what they watch, then one must show up
Complex Systems is back with our summer video episodes, including with Justin Kuiper on the microeconomics of everyone's favorite Google-owned video site, where you could also hypothetically watch CS. (I feel like a Zoomer self-censoring the name to avoid algorithmic smackdown.) https://x.com/patio11/status/2077067097109369168/video/1
More than the monetary case for it, I’m intrigued by Justin’s theory on why serious people should attempt to do video. It’s what the youth watch. “Video essays” are the native form factor for some amount of education/indoctrination/other responsibilities to the rising generation.
One of Justin’s most interesting points is that the ecosystem feeds on itself in largely a positive way: a YouTuber who gets 10k views on a video might have just earned $30 if monetized. Fairly reliably, a larger channel will say “We are a better bidder for your skill set.
Personally I hate producing video with a passion unmatched by a thousand burning suns. I’m a writer first and then do podcasts as a side business which (for reasons alluded to) monetizes surprisingly well. But if The Kids (TM) are formed by what they watch, then one must show up
Complex Systems is back with our summer video episodes, including with Justin Kuiper on the microeconomics of everyone's favorite Google-owned video site, where you could also hypothetically watch CS. (I feel like a Zoomer self-censoring the name to avoid algorithmic smackdown.) https://x.com/patio11/status/2077067097109369168/video/1
More than the monetary case for it, I’m intrigued by Justin’s theory on why serious people should attempt to do video. It’s what the youth watch. “Video essays” are the native form factor for some amount of education/indoctrination/other responsibilities to the rising generation.
One of Justin’s most interesting points is that the ecosystem feeds on itself in largely a positive way: a YouTuber who gets 10k views on a video might have just earned $30 if monetized. Fairly reliably, a larger channel will say “We are a better bidder for your skill set.
Users objected to the Complex Systems Podcast returning with a YouTube microeconomics episode because they strongly dislike video production and prefer writing or audio formats.
Based on 1 visible X reactions from 2 accounts; directional sample.
Ask a question below.
Published answers will appear here.