How to Create a YouTube Channel and Make Money (2018)

https://www.wired.com/story/creator-support-youtube-stars

For anyone who doesn’t work in the vast world of online videos, the idea of “YouTube stars” is baffling. What’s even more astounding is that so many of those YouTubers can make a living simply from viral videos. An entire career just based on posting funny things on the internet, where so many people do it for free? How does that work? How does someone make producing online videos their full-time job?

For the most part, the answers are straightforward. “Advertisers pay to have their ads shown in front of YouTube videos,” says Markiplier, who currently has 21 million subscribers for his gaming videos. “You get a share of that.” Determining that share, however, is a little more complex. “It’s like this: You have a fraction of an amount. 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,” adds Hannah Hart, whose longstanding channel has some 2.5 million subs. Beyond that there are merch deals, collaborations with brands, and other promotions YouTubers can use to bring in cash from their channels.

“I don’t think you get paid for subscribers [though],” says Rhett, one half of Rhett and Link, the team behind Good Mythical Morning—a fact that his cohost calls “sad.”

But that’s just one of the tricks of the trade revealed in this episode of Creator Support, wherein we asked a host of YouTubers questions that fans and aspiring viral video creators posted on Twitter. Want to know what kind of gear Hart uses or how Liza Koshy came up with her popular character Helga? It’s all in the video above. So, surprisingly, is the method with which Rhett and Link settle arguments. Short version: It involves something called “slapth”-ing. Don’t ask. Just watch.


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September 5, 2018 at 03:21PM

Charted: Here’s how much your food waste hurts the environment

https://www.popsci.com/wasted-food-environment-impact?dom=rss-default&src=syn

Our species is pretty good at wasting food. Some we discard at the farm for being undersized or oddly shaped. Others we allow to decay in their shipping containers, thrown away before they even reach shelves. We leave even more foodstuffs wasting away in grocery stores, often by letting it sit there until it reaches its sell-by date. As consumers, we don’t have much control over most of the process that brings our food to the grocery store, but we do have control over how much food we personally waste.

Let’s face it: We’ve all found liquified lettuce in our veggie drawers. Don’t fret. It’s arguably impossible to consume 100 percent of the food we buy. But a healthy reminder of the effect food waste has on the environment might help us all to be more conscious of the amount of food we eat—and don’t eat.

Consumer food waste varies extensively depending on the area. In South and Southeast Asia, the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) estimates that only around 5 percent of total wastage comes from consumers. Most, instead, comes from the agricultural and handling/storage phases of production. But in America, as in Europe and “Industrialized Asia” (that’s China, Japan, and South Korea), consumers are responsible for about a third of all food wastage. Agriculture also accounts for about a third, and the remaining third is split evenly between the handling/storage, processing, and distribution phases.

That’s no small amount for consumers to be wasting. Globally, we fail to use about a third of all food produced for human consumption. The FAO cites both bad “purchase planning” and “exaggerated concern over ‘best-before dates’” as reasons for the significant wastage on the consumer ends in affluent countries. That is, we buy too much food and let it rot in our homes before we get around to eating it, or we throw out perfectly good food because a printed date says it’s expired. Historically, it’s been difficult to figure out just how much impact any specific food has on the environment.

To estimate a number like that, you have to do what’s called a life cycle analysis. For example, to calculate that amount for a tomato, you’d have to work out which agricultural processes go into farming that fruit. How much fuel does the tractor use? How much energy goes into the fertilizer? And when it comes to meat, how much does a cow burp? How much energy do you need to make the feed for chickens? Interestingly, life cycle analysis doesn’t include the emissions involved in transporting food from farm to market. As Martin Heller, a chemical engineer at the University of Michigan’s Center for Sustainable Systems, previously told Popular Science, “The whole local food movement has really emphasized the impact of food miles, but most of the research points out that that’s not really a huge part of the total. What goes on at the farm is a much bigger piece.”

Engineers and other researchers like Heller have put an enormous amount of collective time into calculating exactly how much greenhouse gas emissions are a tomato or a steak embodies. It’s mostly other researchers who use this kind of data, but we here at Popular Science used it to figure out how wasteful we’re really being when we fail to eat the food in our fridges.

This is just a small sampling of the database, but there’s a trend that jumps out pretty quickly: Meat is extremely polluting; beef most of all. That’s because animals require a lot of feed, which itself must be grown, and that extra step of growing mostly grain-based chow really adds up. Cows also burp methane, which is about 30 times more potent than carbon dioxide as a heat-trapping gas.

Cheese also places pretty high, since it requires a lot of milk to make. Depending on the cheese variety, and assuming you’re using cow’s milk, you need around 10 pounds of milk to make one pound of cheese—that’s 10 pounds of milk coming from a burpin’, grain-consumin’ bovine.

You may also notice that oils rank fairly high. Like trendy nut milks, oils have inordinate environmental impacts because they’re purified. A liter of olive oil requires five kilograms of olives (a tree only makes between 15 and 20 in a whole year). That’s why a kilo of the oil represents 3.206 CO2 equivalents, but a kilo of actual olives only represents 0.482 CO2 equivalents.

So the next time you throw out food, think back to this chart. Think about all the fertilizer and tractor fuel that went into making it. And then think about how easy it would be to buy a little less food than you think you might need, or how you could search for recipes to use up that leftover cheese. There’s even a website where you can choose which ingredients you have on hand and it will give you a list of dishes you can make. (Consuming less meat—especially beef—would also help, a lot.) And at the very least, you should make an effort to compost the food you end up throwing away. Otherwise it will continue to produce greenhouse gases as it slowly decomposes in a landfill.

The bottom line is, a third of the food we waste in America gets wasted in our homes, but we have the power to change that.

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September 5, 2018 at 07:09AM

Didi to spend $20 million on customer service after passenger murders

https://www.engadget.com/2018/09/05/didi-20-million-investment-passenger-murders/


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Didi Chuxing will spend $20 million on measures meant to fortify its customer service, according to Reuters. The Chinese ride-hailing firm’s founder, Cheng Wei, announced the investment to a group of government regulators who visited Didi’s offices for a nationwide inspection triggered by a harrowing incident wherein one of its drivers raped and killed a female passenger. Didi halted its carpooling service across the country after authorities confirmed the event, which occurred on August 24th, and after an investigation revealed that it could’ve been prevented if the company has better customer service.

Apparently, the victim sent in a complaint about the same driver on the 23rd, reporting that he exhibited threatening behavior, including following her after he dropped her off. Didi failed to respond to her concerns within its promised two-hour window and to kick off the offending driver from its platform in time. The ride-hailing firm, which gobbled up Uber’s business in the region, will use its $20 million investment to build an 8,000-strong customer service team by the end of the year.

Didi is facing intense scrutiny, not only because the incident could’ve been prevented, but because it’s the second murder linked to the platform within the span of a few months. Back in May, a Didi driver’s son who used his father’s credentials allegedly murdered a 21-year-old flight attendant. That prompted the platform to require drivers to verify their identities using facial recognition before each shift. It also upgraded its emergency button to give passengers a way to call the cops or friends and family in one click. Plus, it started testing a feature that gave customers a way to record audio.

via Engadget http://www.engadget.com

September 5, 2018 at 08:27AM

Lawyer For Homeless Man Says $400,000 Raised To Help Him Is Gone

https://www.npr.org/2018/09/04/644674692/lawyer-for-homeless-man-says-400-000-raised-to-help-him-is-gone?utm_medium=RSS&utm_campaign=news

Mark D’Amico (left) and Kate McClure (center) speak with Megyn Kelly on Megyn Kelly Today. The couple set up a GoFundMe page for homeless man Johnny Bobbitt, but his lawyer says the money is gone and little of it went to Bobbitt.

Nathan Congleton/AP


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Nathan Congleton/AP

Mark D’Amico (left) and Kate McClure (center) speak with Megyn Kelly on Megyn Kelly Today. The couple set up a GoFundMe page for homeless man Johnny Bobbitt, but his lawyer says the money is gone and little of it went to Bobbitt.

Nathan Congleton/AP

When Johnny Bobbitt first met Kate McClure and their feel-good story about a chance encounter that changed both their lives hit the daytime TV circuit, he said her generosity inspired an “indescribable” feeling in him. But less than a year later, that feeling has become devastation, according to his lawyer.

Bobbitt and his attorney claim that more $400,000 raised by McClure and her boyfriend in a GoFundMe campaign intended to lift him out of homelessness, has vanished without ever reaching him.

Bobbitt and McClure crossed paths in October 2017, when McClure ran out of gas on Interstate 95. Using his last $20, Bobbitt, who was homeless at the time, offered help. He walked to a gas station and safely got McClure back on her way home to New Jersey. In gratitude, McClure and Mark D’Amico launched a GoFundMe campaign that went viral and received more than 14,000 donations totaling $402,706.

In McClure’s pitch to the public, she pledged to use the money to buy Bobbitt a home and his dream car — a 1999 Ford Ranger. “There will also be 2 trusts set up in his name, one essentially giving him the ability to collect a small ‘salary’ each year and another retirement trust which will be wisely invested by a financial planner which he will have access to in a time frame he feels comfortable with so when the time comes he can live his retirement dream of owning a piece of land and a cabin in the country,” she wrote.

But Bobbitt’s lawyer, Chris Fallon, argues the couple failed to deliver on any of their promises. They didn’t buy Bobbitt a house, they bought him a trailer, registered it under McClure’s name and parked it on her family’s land. They didn’t buy Bobbitt’s dream car, they bought him different used car, also registered under McClure’s name. It has since broken down. The salary never materialized and neither did the investments. And now, all of the money is apparently gone.

Fallon said he learned of the dried-up account during a call with the couple’s lawyer on Tuesday.

“It completely shocked me when I heard,” Fallon told the Philadelphia Inquirer. “It came as a complete surprise to me.”

He described Bobbitt as “completely devastated” by the revelation, according NJ.com.

In an interview with CNN Fallon said by his accounting “there should be close to another $300,000 available to Johnny.”

Bobbitt has filed a lawsuit against McClure, who works as a secretary for the New Jersey Department of Transportation, and D’Amico, a carpenter, accusing the couple of mismanaging the money raised on his behalf. And last week, a judge ordered the couple to wire the remaining funds into a trust account and provide a full accounting of what has been spent.

The Inquirer reported the couple missed the Friday deadline.

On Tuesday, Fallon asked the judge to hold the couple in contempt of court and to relinquish what is left of the donations within 24 hours.

Both McClure and D’Amico have repeatedly denied the allegations that they’ve dipped into Bobbitt’s funds. They argue they’ve maintained control of the donations to protect the former Marine veteran, who is drug addict.

“I don’t want him to do anything stupid,” D’Amico told the Inquirer. “He’s a drug addict. That’s like me handing him a loaded gun. He has to do what he has to do to get his life together.”

In an interview on Megyn Kelly Today, on Aug. 27, they said they’ve given Bobbitt close to $350,000. Much of it went toward buying the camper trailer, the used car, Bobbitt’s prior outstanding legal fees, and a $25,000 cash deposit into Bobbitt’s account, which they say he spent mostly on drugs over 13 days. The pair also said Bobbitt gave a significant portion of the sum to family members.

Bobbitt now claims he never wanted the SolAire camper the couple bought. But in an April interview with the Inquirer, he said, “I want to experience life. That’s why I bought a camper — so I could go hunting and fishing.”

He has also raised questions about how the couple has been able to afford a new BMW and recent trips to Las Vegas. They say they’ve paid for the expenses out of their own pocket.

“I hate that it came to this,” Bobbitt told ABC 6, adding that he is back to being homeless and living on the streets.

The network reported that GoFundMe released a statement on Tuesday saying that “any money that was misspent will be guaranteed by the company.”

The Associated Press reported the New Jersey judge overseeing the case has given McClure and D’Amico 10 days to hire an accountant to review the financial records.

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September 4, 2018 at 08:10PM