SPUNJ
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And now that allows the audience to latch on to it as well.
You build up a great trophy moment, a great walkout, a great environment for the players.
And now all of a sudden the players see this and like, I fucking want to win this event because I want to be in front of 15,000 fans in the middle of that center stage, lifting that fucking cup.
So I think that's probably-
for more like in-depth analytical analytical things but you've seen play-by-play commentators do other games before right and obviously they still need to have a significant understanding that's not to discredit any of that it's just it also gets a little bit more surface it also depends on the kind of event you'd go do as a talent from a different game as well right like i could never go in and cast the fucking world championship of call of duty but i've gone to twitchcon and i've casted a streamer competition of call of duty without knowing anything about the game you know like you could pull it off
but i don't get that back jason i do um but i think also like um i don't think there's actually i don't know if you guys would agree with this or disagree with this i actually don't necessarily think there's like a huge value to having on-air broadcast experience as a broadcast talent from other games
Right, but I don't think any TO would hire someone from a different game and say, oh, they've been on like 50 of these broadcasts, that's huge, over hiring a streamer or a content creator.
I'm not trying to get you to stop.
The reps are great.
Get the experience.
But I don't think an experience on a League of Legends official broadcast is going to be a huge sell to coming and working on a Counter-Strike broadcast.
We're the worst people to ask that question to.
I think if you want to answer that question realistically, the two people you should look at to get into casting at this day and age is someone like, well, the one person I would point out would be Launders.
It's like starting a YouTube channel, build an audience of the content you're creating, use that audience to leverage yourself into more and more works on the low end, and then kind of grind up through the ladder like that.
that's starting the content building of a fan base.
That's going to comment when you're on events and give your name out there on social media and on Reddit.
That's huge.
So, I mean, I think that's, that's really the way these days is you have to start by becoming a content creator, getting ingrained in the community streaming and use that kind of personality recognition to break in there, doesn't it?
So welcome to the battle for people's attention.
yeah i'm not i'm not saying like i'm not not trying to be pointing out oh wow look at this revelation to people it's just that's the harsh reality of it it's it's it's tough to know what's going to resonate with the audience you could also never get into commentary the way scrawny did it for instance either like scrawny just had a clip of him casting a random matchmaking game to the to the front page of reddit and that blew up to a degree where he got hired for a job and then he just went from there like that's that's not gonna happen really