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0:00
Hey, we're running late.
0:00
Hi, I'm Liza Koshi.
0:01
Hi, my name is Markiplier.
0:01
Hi, I'm Hannah Hart, and welcome to Creator Support.
0:06
Samak Cookie, how do you guys define success and how did you know you made it on YouTube?
0:11
I'll never say that I've made it, like I'll never have it where I'm like, yeah, this is it.
0:17
Dude, I got my start in 2011, there wasn't success on YouTube.
0:17
I was just happy that I could create content and post it and that people liked to watch it.
0:17
I define success by doing what makes you truly happy.
0:17
For me, success is derived by the amount of pride I take in the work that I do.
0:17
At Lilly and Sam asks, your opinion is very needed, how many times a week should I post a video on YouTube?
0:17
As many times as you can mentally, physically, and emotionally handle.
0:17
Whenever you have something worthy of sharing.
0:38
If you put up garbage, you're going to feel like garbage.
0:47
Are you going to be completely beholden to the expectations set by content hungry teenagers?
0:47
Are you going to set out a creative path and lead your audience?
0:47
We don't do that.
0:47
Yo, Kita BCS, how long does it take to create a YouTube video for you?
0:47
It takes me, dude, you're looking at the entire production company right now.
1:01
I write everything by myself and I shoot everything by myself.
1:04
It takes me a very long time to create a three-minute, so five-minute video.
1:12
A Leone Man, A Leo or a Lion Man, why did you start making videos on YouTube?
1:12
For me, it started out as a joke.
1:12
I made a video for somebody that I loved and I sent it to them via YouTube.
1:12
It went viral and now I work in entertainment.
1:12
I was really bored.
1:12
I had a lot of voices in my head and I decided to put a wig on them and a mustache on them and start giving them names.
1:25
And I'm fine.
1:27
It was a way for me to express myself and to kind of have fun.
1:32
Well, actually, we didn't start making videos on YouTube.
1:33
Somebody took videos we had made, not on YouTube, and put them on YouTube, but that person that took those videos, they're dead now.
1:39
I started making videos because I didn't like where my life was going.
1:43
I was at a low point, just came out of a surgery to remove a tumor, bad relationship, got laid off from my job, so I needed some semblance of control in my life.
1:51
Let's Plays were something that were easy to grasp.
1:54
I felt like I could start out on doing it and actually have something to make and then I could build on it from there and start doing sketches and stuff.
2:27
McKenna Rash, something I'm still trying to get rid of, what do you guys do when you have a disagreement, how do you solve it?
2:27
It's not slaps, it's laughs.
2:27
That's when you limp handedly, I give up, I won that creative argument.
2:27
Next question.
2:27
Okay, Liza Koshi, I know you get this a lot but I need advice, I really want to start vlogging but I hit some mental roadblock every time.
2:27
You'll set aside the time that you have for writing or creating and set aside some time for really believing in yourself and loving yourself and appreciating what you do.
2:27
Harry Aru, since I'm about to reach 1k subs in a few months on YouTube, how do you want me to celebrate it once the milestone is reached?
2:27
However you want to.
2:27
I tried to do the cinnamon challenge and I ended up inhaling cinnamon and I had to go to the doctor afterwards, so don't do that.
2:48
One time I was did a 12-hour live stream called thankathon.
2:54
Congealed pork blood and a taco would be a great way for you to celebrate.
2:54
At Meg Dragon, I would love to hear more about the mechanics of it all, how long does an idea take from conception to posting?
2:54
Tell us nerd stuff, nerd stuff please.
2:54
It's all in my head and I'll start giggling and then it's some form of a dick joke that usually gets tapered down into an idea where I can make it a punchline of a video.
3:13
We have to produce so much content at this point that no one has the balls to say, I don't think that's a good idea.
3:19
If I have something that is appropriate for 280 or less characters, I do Twitter.
3:24
If I have a video concept, I do YouTube.
3:26
And so now what happens is we're just like, yeah, that's great and then we do it and if it's not good, we just have another video the next day, get over it.
3:38
At 1214 McGuire, may I ask, if all people, how did you get into the Pro-Am's?
3:38
Oh, the Pro-Am, that's the Fortnight tournament, I was very curious about that myself.
3:44
I'm a big guy for charity.
3:46
I do a lot of charity events, so I think that was the main reasoning for it.
3:53
Regan Lingered ass, how did you create your characters like Helga Ilism, which means I live so much, I think so much too.
3:53
Helga was something that actually created among my friends.
3:58
Sounds like a Russian character, I don't know where she's from.
4:04
I ain't gonna say where she's from because that might offend someone so, you know, I'm just gonna refrain from that.
4:04
I think the voice for Helga came first and then kind of her like interesting hunchback that comes along with it.
4:04
It's kind of like a mother that has been through a lot of stress and never got a massage.
4:04
At Kimiko 2, how do YouTubers make money from YouTube?
4:04
Someone told me they are paid for subscribers and views, question please, or do they just get paid for ads and collaborations?
4:28
I don't think you get paid for subscribers, which is sad.
4:29
You do get paid for views.
4:31
Advertisers pay to have their ads shown in front of YouTube videos.
4:35
They don't specifically sell to you, they sell through YouTube, through YouTube's ad system, you get a share of that.
4:40
It's like this, you're the fraction of an amount.
4:44
There's a bunch of factors outside of that that have nothing to do with you that affect whether that fraction is bigger or smaller.
4:51
The other way is brand, you'll see work specifically with a company to make money.
4:51
The other way is selling merch to your fans directly or other things like music on iTunes or whatever have you.
4:51
And there are some people are experimenting with a donate button, have you heard about this?
4:51
I didn't know about a button.
4:51
Yeah, it's a donate button.
4:51
Donate what?
4:51
I think it's old clothes.
4:51
At Dom Kalin, Dom Colin, Dom Kalin, Dom Kalin, does YouTube Red bring any revenue for creators?
4:51
Yeah, it does.
4:51
You get a share of YouTube Red revenue based on watch time.
4:51
People have a subscription to YouTube Red and then that's split among creators dependent on watch time.
4:51
We have at Mad X Stitcher, how did you come to terms with the idea that strangers on the internet probably want to sleep with you?
5:31
That's the sweet.
5:34
They do.
5:34
I am taken and spoken for, so thank you and I appreciate it, but go away.
5:38
I think that's a big compliment and that's really creepy.
5:41
You want to sleep with me, you're also sleeping with my wife and my dog.
5:44
I do have a California king so I do have room in my house.
5:47
I don't think you ever really come to terms with that, man, you're just like, really, wow, you got great taste.
5:51
At Sal VB, I was wondering if you had any advice on changing video titles a week or two after posting as a way of AB testing, any thoughts?
6:00
I have changed my titles before.
6:00
We do this but you didn't hear it here.
6:00
The first day that a video is posted is going to be the most important.
6:00
Think about what you would click on on YouTube and then title it that.
6:00
If you feel like changing something up, change it up, do it, why not?
6:00
What you have to do is be confident in the decisions that you're making as a creator.
6:00
We actually don't wait a week or two, we wait like an hour or two since those are the only things we can change and those are things we do change.
6:00
Boom is Lord 69, how do you guys film GMM?
6:00
Do you film every episode for the weekend one day and edit it later or do you film the episode the night before?
6:00
We filmed all 1400 episodes in 2012 back-to-back and we're getting it's not very, very close to running out.
6:39
Next question.
6:39
At Legit Skeller, Jacksepticeye and Markiplier and Cry was taken, how did you come up with your YouTube names?
6:45
Sean Mark Ryan, not that you guys will see this, you don't even know I exist.
6:49
A lull me and my girl love you guys though, wish you would collab with Ethan, he's adorable.
6:55
My brother actually came up with my name.
6:57
My original intention on YouTube was to make sketch comedy where I play all the characters.
7:01
I didn't know how to do that but the name still stuck.
7:02
I am Mark and I was going to multiply myself, therefore Markiplier.
7:07
Wheel Zoe Marshall says, how do you tell your parents you've decided to do YouTube and play video games for a living?
7:13
Well, my friend, I'm 31 so I don't need to.
7:32
You do YouTube and play video games for a living as in you make a steady paycheck because then your parents have a real distinct answer and you're just like, oh, okay, you're paying your bills, you're doing well, you're doing good.
7:32
I do not encourage you jumping train, abandoning everything else and diving into YouTube before you've even started it.
7:33
James Seymour, how did you guys come up with the let's talk about that intro?
7:37
Originally, we thought our show was just gonna consist of us talking about stuff, things, topics.
7:41
We were gonna banter friendly.
7:47
Then it turns out we had to start eating coagulated pork blood and tacos and the anuses and testicles of several all type of flora and fauna.
7:54
At By For Gaming asks, what is the hardest part of making consistent YouTube content?
7:58
ADHD.
7:58
Yeah, I lose interest really quick.
8:02
Having a vision and being able to make it come true.
8:10
Your cynical comments seeking to not build your self-esteem on people's perception of you, which is exactly what we have done, which is an incredibly unhealthy way to exist.
8:14
I feel like a ghost of a person.
8:15
Make sure you get into a nice routine.
8:17
If you tell yourself that you're gonna create on Wednesdays, make sure that you're riding on Sunday and then filming on Monday and then editing on Tuesday and posting on that Wednesday.
8:26
I've Tiny Dancer 74 says, hey lady, I'm starting a vlog and was wondering what equipment slash software you like to use for your videos.
8:38
Too I, which also means the I.
8:33
I got my start using literally my webcam on my laptop.
8:41
I shot in photo booth and I imported it into iMovie.
8:41
Now I have a Canon 60D, I have a Rode on-boarded mic and I edit in Adobe Premiere.
9:11
That should be good.
9:21
What's the best video you ever made?
9:21
We've never seen corrupted, deleted or never uploaded.
9:21
I didn't upload it because it was inappropriate.
9:21
Okay, honestly, any video that I have chosen not to upload was boring.
9:21
There was an entire sketch that we filmed.
9:21
We only needed one shot left.
9:21
The SD card that it was all on just disappeared.
9:21
The backups that we made to the computer were all corrupted.
9:21
Sometimes you're gonna make some things that you're not the most proud of ever, that you're not super into, it's fine, just keep creating.
9:21
We need to consult our PR person.
9:21
Should we tell the story about?
9:18
No, but we'll change the name.
9:21
Yeah, we were once making a video with Fire at Tanks, supermodel, super smodel in a waffle iron.
9:28
Think about it, you've never seen Fire at Tanks left hand and if you do, there will be a noticeable grid on it.
9:28
Elite Shaka, I'm gonna say what YouTubers do you guys watch?
9:28
Have you ever watched Jen's Kitchen, lovely Japanese man cooks for his cats?
9:28
I watched Anna Marbles on YouTube.
9:28
I watched Ryan Higa on YouTube.
9:28
I watched the Fine Brothers on YouTube.
9:28
I watched Kurzgesagt, which is also called In a Nutshell, they are a informational animation channel.
9:28
We only watch our own videos.
9:52
Just reverse it, it's hard to find good stuff to watch on YouTube so we just watch Link and Rhett.
10:00
Yep, and Primitive Technology.
10:00
Oh yeah, it's good.
10:00
There's also Cyanide and Happiness and Bro Science Life and 40K theories, which is for Warhammer 40K, which I'm a big fan of and I don't talk about.
10:00
Hi Markiplier, I have a question, how did you get noticed with your YouTube channel or at what point?
10:00
My first exposure was the first reaction compilation that I made, which is just an assembly of funny moments in my gaming career.
10:00
I posted it on YouTube and it got posted to Reddit and it just so happened to get to like third place on the video section of Reddit and suddenly I got subscribers.
10:00
Christina, why can't my parents understand how important it is for me to go to VidCon?
10:25
The moment your parents understand why you should be at VidCon, you will no longer want to.
10:38
VidCon is very expensive, your parents have bills to pay.
10:40
If you're a huge fan of someone, if you explain that you've been watching them for years, they've supported you, you've gotten a lot of inspiration from them, that's one reason.
10:49
Good old Ron Moray, how many production hours go into GMM, pre-video posts?
10:57
Proud to say my 16-year-old has heard of your show, awesome work guys.
10:57
Good to know.
10:57
It would be embarrassing if we actually did the math on that and gave you the real number that went into 12 to 15 minutes of content every single day.
10:57
It's more than you think is necessary, as is evidenced by the fact that every time we post a picture of our crew, the first question is, why do you need so many people?
11:12
At Ire About, what is the best way to make a call to action really work?
11:17
Best way to make a call to action really work is to make an actual logical argument to your viewer base as to why this is important.
11:26
I do these call to actions on charity efforts.
11:28
Ask small, these fans, these people supporting you, they are your fans, they believe in you and they believe in what you're doing.
11:37
Well, The Knock Bard, Knock Bard, Nocturnal Bard, am I a bad human being for feeling super aggravated when someone tells you to like and subscribe more than once in a YouTube video?
11:39
I feel like creators should focus on a good impression instead of begging for subs, maybe I'm just tired and grumpy today.
11:49
I completely agree with you.
11:49
We do it in every single episode, we say liking, commenting and subscribing, we do it once.
11:55
I understand why you get super aggravated by it but it's a way for a creator to measure whether or not a new format that they're testing out is working.
12:02
I feel like if the content is good, it will stand on its own.
12:04
If the videos are bad, leave, don't watch my stuff.
12:08
If you enjoy it, I'm gonna keep pushing myself to make better stuff and that's what should matter.
12:11
Well, thanks for all your, your questions.
12:13
I don't usually give advice like this but I do have some knowledge in my head.
12:17
If you enjoyed this video and want to see more support from creators, click like and subscribe.
12:22
Also, make sure to keep doing what you love and creating what makes you happy and others.
12:26
Thank you so much for watching.
12:27
Bye bye.
12:30
We didn't help anybody.
12:30
We helped one person, someone named Patrick.
12:32
I'm sensing Patrick, this was for you.