I can relate to that. I've been doing reviews on YouTube for a couple of years now and some of them I post in the User Reviews section here but it's rare for anyone to post a reply. I've got 40 subscribers on YouTube and things really haven't gone as well as I hoped they would but I enjoy making the videos so I'm not too fussed.Copper Zen said:Consider it this way...
The Escapist has a User Review forum--that practically no one visits. Seriously, [user]Marter[/user] has done a few hundred movie reviews that never received so much as a single reply.
You'll have to have a thick skin for that sort of work. If you can cope with endless lack of responses in anticipation of that rare reply--one which may criticize rather than praise your POV--then go for it!
But do be aware that all you may hear in response is crickets. Lots and lots of crickets.
Now, now, that would be telling, wouldn't it? ;DBertylicious said:Do you think you could give us some tips or possibly even a guide?
You really should.Binnsyboy said:I should probably pick mine up again when the exams are over...
Or daily. =Dron1n said:A Routine in writing reviews whether it's weekly or monthly is also good and helps stave off procrastination.
Does a Youtube channel count for that loophole, or does it apply to blogs specifically? It's kinda relevant to a "documentary" I'm working on that one could call I review.Marter said:Except, of course, at the end of a review posted in User Reviews.Copper Zen said:@all: Just everybody remember that while you can list your personal blog in your profile it's against the Code of Conduct [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/forums/codeofconduct] to link it in the forums.
You can link to your channel at the end of a video review, but you can't ask/beg for subscriptions.DrunkOnEstus said:Does a Youtube channel count for that loophole, or does it apply to blogs specifically? It's kinda relevant to a "documentary" I'm working on that one could call I review.
That's absolutely fine, and good to hear, the quality of the content in question should be what sells someone on a subscribe, not how it was asked for. Thank you for the insight.Marter said:You can link to your channel at the end of a video review, but you can't ask/beg for subscriptions.DrunkOnEstus said:Does a Youtube channel count for that loophole, or does it apply to blogs specifically? It's kinda relevant to a "documentary" I'm working on that one could call I review.
Weird, I know, but there you go.