Source: amazon.com Over the post few days, Youtuber Gabbie Hanna has been on a mission to confront someone who reviewed and critiqued her poetry book. The tweets and Instagram stories that she posted, calling out fellow Youtuber, Rachel Oates, were cruel and unnecessary. Gabbie has created two poetry books over the years, and since they are available for the public to purchase, these customers have the right to review them. Rachel's reviews were no worse than anyone else's. In fact, she gave constructive criticism and insight into how Gabbie could better her poetry in the future, when most did not. She had knowledge of the structure of poems and how to tie in themes without explicitly saying it to the audience. Her advice was useful, however Gabbie calls it "bullying". She also called Oates a "loser" for not getting as many views on her videos as Gabbie does, and sent her fans to attack her. This is a bigger problem regarding large creators taking down s...
Source: cherwell.org Platforms like Vine and Tiktok have allowed everyday people to become some of the most recognized names on the internet. However, some of them seem to be bound to the platform that they gained their popularity on. Many of these stars have tried to make the transition onto Youtube, but have not reached the same level of success. Why is this? There are so many creators that I like/ liked on Vine or Tiktok that I just do not find interesting on Youtube. I think the bottom line is: it is easy to keep people interested in 6 second or minute long increments. A story time that only has one exciting part to it can easily be told on Tiktok, but stretching it out into a 10 minute long Youtube video is where the audience starts to get bored. I...