Just about everyone with an Internet connection has some use for YouTube. As one of the dozens of signs held aloft in the melting late August heat said: “Superwoman and YouTube brought us here.” ![]() “I want this event to happen, and I want there to be a sea of Superwoman there. “And not only are YouTubers important, our followings are incredible.” ![]() “I really have this desire to make it known that the Internet exists and YouTubers are important,” she says earnestly into a hand-held camera. But #TeamSuper, Singh’s social media-based fan club, is well represented.Ī day before the event, she posted an online appeal for viewers to show up and stage a digital insurgency against the impending silver-screen worship. Thousands have turned out for a glimpse of Salman Khan, the Bollywood heartthrob who co-produced the film. Cabbie, a movie about Indian immigrants to Canada in which she has a small part. Today, she’s helping launch the soundtrack for Dr. Singh is part of a generation of YouTubers cornering the entertainment market of the future: low-budget, self-produced, alternately intimate and goofy and, most importantly, 100-per-cent digital.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |