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charlie's avatar

my fave thing about this type of content is i will be watching someone do a house renovation tour and somehow, in the midst of the 30 min video, will come away with a really good breakfast recipe and 3 brilliant new ways of organising my cupboards. and the person will have no idea that their reno vid has randomly changed the way i then go on to organise my kitchen and how much of an improvement it will be. like this happens all the time with so many different lifestyle creators. i just absord and learn so many little tips and tricks that then become my tips and tricks. also for years and years i didnt realize i was ADHD and that i was using these videos to bodydouble. the tidiness of my whole house after someone posts a 50min closet cleanout vid is unreal 😅 also i think its harder to find irl friends who share your politics, views, interests than it is to find a youtuber who does. and if you're like me and mostly housebound from chronic illnesses then that is just.. such a comfort! theres also this idea that watching lifestyle vloggers means you're lonely but idk, my 65yr old mum has a perfectly fine social life yet i recently found out she religiously watches a vlogger who restores vintage cars! theres truly a creator niche for every hobby, every person. i love your 'jumbled' approach. because i just like you as a person and i value your insights and recommendations :) i think this person genuinely did try to be nice, but perhaps lacked the self reflection to realise it was an issue on her end, and not yours, and that she didn't need to message you 😅

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Quinn Rhodes (he/him)'s avatar

I think unsolicited "constructive feedback" is always rude. I'm always open to feedback from friends, from people I love, from journalist acquaintances, editors, and other people I'm working with, but I'm very much NOT open to feedback from people who I don't know or haven't asked for feedback from! I think being a YouTuber/creator/person whose work is online to a degree means your work and career choices are on display in a way that most people's simply aren't – meaning people feel like they offer "constructive" feedback whether or not you want it. Like, they're not your colleague or your boss or someone who is actually in your life; the para-social relationship means that people can end up thinking their feedback is solicited in the way the friends' you asked about the "constructive feedback" was.

To answer the actual question you asked: I enjoy lifestyle content for the connection and comfort of feeling like I'm less alone in what I'm going through, and inspiration, motivation, and (sometimes) clarity about what I want my own life to look like. I like people talking about work, freelancing, and creativity, videos about books and (sometimes) productivity, and lifestyle content from creators who are queer, disabled, and/or autistic. I'm quite selective about what lifestyle content I watch nowadays (though I'm not immune to occasionally frustration-watching content from people who I don't agree with ideologically and/or makes me feel worse about myself). I often enjoy vlog content rather than videos that try to have a 'helpful' takeaway for the viewer, and I try to avoid lifestyle content that involves abled and/or neurotypical people discussing aspects of productivity and wellness with no nuance for how those things are not accessible (or desirable) for everyone.

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