YouTube's Top-Earner For 2018 Is a 7-Year-Old (usatoday.com) 78
In 2018 the most-downloaded iPhone app was YouTube, reports USA Today, while Amazon's best-selling item was their Fire TV Stick for streaming video. "Sense a trend? We love to stream video."
If you're thinking of quitting your day job this year and looking to strike it big in the world of online video, maybe this will inspire you. The No. 1 earner on YouTube this year is.....7-year-old Ryan from Ryan Toys Review. For all those unboxing videos and playing with toys -- and his own new line of toys at Walmart -- he and his family will pull in a cool $22 million, according to Forbes.
Ryan launched the channel in 2015 -- when he was four -- and now has 17.3 million followers.
One viral video of the 7-year-old even racked up 1.6 billion views, though apparently Ryan actually has fewer subscribers than several of the game streamers among YouTube's top-ten earners.
Ryan launched the channel in 2015 -- when he was four -- and now has 17.3 million followers.
One viral video of the 7-year-old even racked up 1.6 billion views, though apparently Ryan actually has fewer subscribers than several of the game streamers among YouTube's top-ten earners.
I watched a few minutes of his videos... (Score:3)
and I don't get why anyone would watch this. Period.
Re: (Score:3)
and I don't get why anyone would watch this. Period.
Still would've been novel for ./ to actually link to the YouTube channel, so some of us could easily check it now..... but no.
Re: (Score:3)
The internet is now inhabited by the "consumer class". They just want to be entertained.
Eternal autumn is exactly that- but it's been extended to every human capable of using a phone.
Re:I watched a few minutes of his videos... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Does he give his dad an allowance?
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
People watch PewdiePie and made Justin Bieber famous so.... I don't know either.
Re: (Score:2)
and I don't get why anyone would watch this. Period.
You need to be seven to understand.
Re: (Score:2)
You are not 4 years old, not the target audience.
The reason he brings in so much money even though he has fewer subscribers is that 4 year olds don't interact with YouTube like older children and adults do. They just keep watching video after autoplay video. Adults only watch exceptional videos more than once, 4 year olds love repetition.
Re: (Score:2)
It's the kid version of unbox therapy [youtube.com].
They didn't make it for YOU (Score:2)
Paid (Score:2)
Getting paid to play with toys on camera? How exploited can you get?
Re: (Score:2)
Can I be exploited like that too?
7 y/o and already more important than Ken Doll (Score:2, Funny)
And already a better and more legitimate businessman than Trump too.
Youtube censored everybody else. (Score:5, Funny)
He won by default.
Re: (Score:2)
If anything, is detached from reality, it's how you, use commas.
Re: (Score:2)
"The fact that you are a good pianist and a competent clarinet player doesn't excuse the horrid noise you make with a violin."
W.S. Churchill.
Adpocalypse (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Advertiser safe? It sounds like the channel is nothing more or less than 100% toy advertisement videos. The trick is they found a ton of people will seek out and watch ads if they star a cute kid who's too naive to realize it's an ad.
Re: (Score:2)
From listening to my friends with young children and seeing it in action, it's purely the "entertainment value," not the toys themselves. Children genuinely respond more to watching the video than actually opening or playing with the same toy themselves, and rarely express any interest in the specific toy outside of the viewing experience. They just want to watch the videos.
Can't say I'm surprised. (Score:2)
Rise of the Influencers (Score:5, Informative)
I imagine he gets paid tons of money from toy companies to review toys they send him, and someone offscreen prompts him to talk about various bullet-points written up by said companies. Not sure if that's part of the $22 million figure, but ~$50k per paid review is typical for popular influencers.
Pro boxers can get investigated for a paid endorsement for a cryptocurrency without saying they've been compensated, but randos can make videos on the Youtubes doing the same thing with impunity, and the same agency can only say they're looking into maybe requiring disclosures.
Re: (Score:1)
It’s no less illegal, but much harder to prosecute random Joe Schmoe on the Internet for undisclosed paid endorsements.
Then there’s the difference in damage from a pro boxer doing it vs a bunch of random nobodies.
Re: (Score:2)
You say that like you have an issue with it?
Personally, I think it's kind of a great equalizer. There's really no reason some celebrity sports person or Hollywood actor/actress should have the special privilege of getting paid big money to do product endorsements, while the "average Joe", who might actually use and like the products, gets paid nothing for making personal recommendations.
If you can't make buying decisions without blindly following what people say on their homemade YouTube videos, you have b
Re: (Score:2)
The average Joe still gets paid nothing. It's the inexplicable celebrities-for-no-talent-or-reason, people who are basically famous for being famous, who get paid for endorsements.
Re: (Score:2)
Lotsa pedo guys :( (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Who designed Gnome 3? Who let the certificates expire? Who invented codes of conduct for programming languages?
They're that thick and then some.
My son watches this. (Score:1)
Ryan didn't launch his channel when he was 4 (Score:5, Insightful)
His parents did, and are monetising their son.
Re: (Score:2)
They are true visionaries. Honestly I'm just upset my cat didn't grow up with a grumpy face early in the history of youtube. I would have made a mint!
Re: (Score:2)
His parents did, and are monetising their son.
True, but I'd guess it works pretty well for him, too. I watched a couple videos and a lot of them are about the interactions between the kid and his parents and sisters, and it's pretty clearly enjoyable for all of them. According to the Wikipedia article, the whole thing was Ryan's idea originally, too -- in a babyish way, of course, since he was only four at the time. He just asked his mom why he wasn't on YouTube.
Perhaps more important, it means he has both of his parents home with him so he gets a
I'm not ads on that channel (Score:2)
How do they make money?
Re: (Score:2)
Same thing with most of those cooking channels, they're usually pitching their own cookbooks and cooking equipment. And those skydiving/wingsuit/base j