matthewb
@matthewb
I think I have spent at least 10yr directly or indirectly grappling with the unsustainable nature of creative output (music, photography, “content,” whatever) ultimately it’s just a black pill to swallow that most content is not going to be profitable to produce unless you’re top 1% or higher
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Noah Bragg 🔥
@nbragg
Yeah that is tough. And this getting harder with ai. We would all like to make our hobbies our job.
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matthewb
@matthewb
re: the latter, imo the average person does not have enough niche knowledge and expertise to truly command an audience with their “hobby.” but yes the desire is probably universal to some extent.
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Trigs
@trigs
Maybe not command an audience of Matthews, but most ppl don't have your level of appreciation for high level expertise, I would hazard to guess! 😆 Most shit that trends is because of how stupidly entertaining it is, not how accurately it conveys domain expertise. I would go so far as to guess that more people might actually appreciate humble averageness over expertise that makes it seem inaccessible. Maybe what the average person is lacking is simply just the ability to create the content in an interesting way. But it also probably depends greatly on the type of content/hobby.
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matthewb
@matthewb
producing high-quality content requires expertise in subject matter, production, storytelling and writing, the list goes on. that’s part of why there are few content creators for any given niche, if you have some combination of those traits then you are likely gainfully employed and busy. depends on the niche though, obviously skateboarding will be different than repairing cars. I think you’re gesturing more broadly to lowercase “c” content on social apps which yes absolutely does not need to be anything particularly top tier, it’s more about creating relatable and entertaining brain rot. but that’s very different than what I was replying to above which was “making your hobby your job,” a far more serious proposition.
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