Amelia Dimoldenberg
👤 SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And I think that having that aspect to their personality and their drive has really also made people in the public be more aware of them.
But also with my show, for example, with Chicken Shop Day, I honestly see that as a... It's a show on YouTube.
You know, I'm not vlogging...
I'm not doing something that's kind of more native to the online space.
I'm kind of doing something that traditional media has done for decades, but I am interpreting it to the YouTube audience.
So in that sense, I feel like because of the format aspect of what I do, it's been more easy to translate it to a wider audience.
Like maybe that is just what's happening.
I also think that I'm from a generation where like I grew up watching television and like appointment viewing like that.
Me too, yeah.
I'm 32.
And I think obviously now like 20 year olds, they won't have that at all.
Like they will only have grown up watching TikTok, having a streamer.
They can just watch whatever they want.
So I do think it's like a generational shift that I'm someone who still values the traditional space.
But at the end of the day, I also think that movies will stand the test of time.
Like that is people are always going to want to watch movies and watching a movie and making a movie is different to making a TikTok video.
It just is.
And so it's just a different medium.
And I don't think that the fact that, you know, these new social media platforms coming up means that, you know, they're going to take over that space necessarily.
I just think that people need to understand that they are different platforms that are made for different types of content and the way that you consume it.