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  • Good morning Hank; it's Tuesday.

  • I'm currently on vacation in the house behind me.

  • But that house is full of screaming children,

  • so I am filming in the vast expanse known as outside

  • I recommend outside although there is no climate control, which is a little annoying,

  • and because I've been on vacation I've had three entire days

  • away from the internet which has left me wondering: how does this end?

  • Like there's this great Molly Lewis song from maybe ten years ago in which the chorus goes:

  • "I hope that you forget about your MySpace,

  • I hope it slips completely from your mind,

  • and I hope it stays up long enough for the next generation to find."

  • And that song has proved kind of stunningly prophetic,

  • so much so that I suspect a number of young people watching this either won't know what MySpace is,

  • or else only have a vague notion of it as a precursor to Facebook, and yet my MySpace is still there,

  • a minor museum to my 2007 self, complete with a profile pic advertising the forthcoming publication of Paper Towns

  • So is that how things end on the Internet? Still sort of present, but relevant only as nostalgia,

  • and will that happen to one or more of the social media du jour? To Twitter or Facebook or YouTube?

  • Like, YouTube has survived and thrived amid many difficult times in the past:

  • The sub feed has always been broken; the new design has always been reviled;

  • the relationship between creators and the platform has always been fraught,

  • and I don't think YouTube is about to MySpace,

  • but then again, one never sees the future coming.

  • Phillip Roth called history "the relentless unforeseen," and that's true of so much of life.

  • We don't know how it's going to end or for that matter how it's going to middle.

  • I do think YouTube faces big problems:

  • I think it's overly reliant on flawed algorithms,

  • I think its monetization system often values advertisers over audience,

  • but I also think that YouTube is amazing and that there's more good stuff being uploaded than ever.

  • Of course, my real concern is not how YouTube ends. It's how our YouTube ends.

  • Someday, this YouTube channel won't be here, just as we won't be here,

  • and lately, I've been wondering when you ought to say goodbye online, and how to do so,

  • none of which is to say that I'm unhappy or want to stop making vlogbrothers videos, because I don't.

  • I just don't know if I want to be making YouTube videos when I'm 80

  • Well, or maybe I do. Like, if you told me in 2007 that 40-year-old me would still be making YouTube videos,

  • I would be both incredulous and horrified.

  • "How," I would wonder, "could I possibly subject an audience to my hideous 40-year-old face?"

  • and yet here I am, so grateful for the 11 and a half years of conversation

  • I've been able to have here and I hope it long continues but when it does end, I hope it ends well.

  • Hank, you recently pointed out to me that if vlogbrothers were a TV show, we would be in our 12th season,

  • which is a very long run on television and also a fairly long run for YouTube channels.

  • As time passes, even good shows become less broadly relevant and less central to the overall cultural discourse

  • and more targeted to a smaller but deeply engaged audience.

  • I feel like that happens with vlogbrothers, and it's been really good news for us.

  • Like, these days, It feels like the people who watch our videos want to be here.

  • They aren't pushed here by the trending page or whatever;

  • they're here because they're nerdfighters. That is what makes it fun for me.

  • So in thinking about how this YouTube channel will end,

  • I'm mostly thinking about how to keep the conversations sustainable and fun both for ourselves and for our audience.

  • To that end, I have both a question and a request.

  • The question is: what do you get out of vlogbrothers videos?

  • Like, what makes this a meaningful experience for you?

  • And what makes your time with us and other nerdfighters valuable?

  • And what should we be looking to change or not change?

  • I guess that's not just one question. I have a few questions.

  • The request is... uh, well, I've been working for this company for twelve years,

  • and I would like three weeks of unpunished vacation per year

  • I'm not going to use it right now or all at once

  • But yeah, I would really benefit from three weeks of vacation per year.

  • That's it. That's why I made the whole video, was so that I could ask my employer for three weeks of unpunished vacation.

  • There is a survey in the doobly-doo below. I will abide by its results. I'm gonna go back to vacation now.

  • Hank, I will see you on Friday.

Good morning Hank; it's Tuesday.

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如何結束? (How Does This End?)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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