![]() ![]() Hands has made 922 videos since she started Fizzy Toy Show in the November of 2014. Slowly, but surely, I started cranking out videos.” I bought some toys, a cheap camcorder and learned iMovie. But, I had no toys, no camera and had never edited a movie. Since I worked with kids, I thought toy reviews was right up my alley. “I did some research and saw the top YouTube earners were gamers and toy reviewers. I looked at the views on these videos and it hit me-these women were making pretty good money making these videos.” she says. One day I was watching videos on YouTube to figure out how to highlight my hair. “I started thinking of other ways to earn money. The long hours drafting cognitive evaluations ate into her off-time, and after five years of miscarriages and failed IVF treatments, she wanted a schedule that would afford her more time with her new family. Hands, who’s tells me she’s over 30 but declines to give her exact age as some of her fans think she’s a teenager, quit that psychology job after the birth of her son. “I can say I’m making more than I did as a school psychologist!” “I can’t say how much I’m pulling in,” she says, when I ask. ![]() Hands is making at least six figures a year for her work. ![]() YouTube is notoriously reticent with concrete revenue specifics for their creators, but the SocialBlade, the touted third-party resource that calculates for YouTube and Twitch channels, estimates that Ms. In a single day, the dragon video has racked up 190,000 views, which is low compared to the 1.7 million views on last week’s “ Greedy Grandma Chef Game! Trolls & Boss Baby Try to Get Food and Not Wake Granny!” But she’s also broadcasting to a one million subscriber count. Hands is a professional pantomimer-she plays with toys the way all parents do when they’re desperate to keep a young child sated. This is the seventh Boss Baby-centric episode she’s released this week, standing shoulder to shoulder alongside previous entries like “ Don’t Wake Boss Baby! Trolls Smurf Play and Try Not Wake The Bad Crying Baby,” or “ Boss Baby Opens Lots of LOL Surprise Dolls Spit, Cry, or Tinkle.” The customer is always right, and in this particular moment in the spring of 2017, the customers want Boss Baby. The video is 13 minutes long, which is the perfect length to maximize profits from YouTube’s advertisement algorithms. Hands squeezes a Thomas the Tank Engine gummy, which she ranks a “10 out of 10” on her homebrew “squish meter.” Smurfette receives a Hello Kitty Chocolate Surprise Egg (with a Hello Kitty magnet inside), and Ms. So, a plushie Boss Baby gets a pair of Num Nom Lights Mystery Packs (a line of small, scented chibis that retail for $7 a pop at your local Target). The plot is entirely tertiary-a simple angle to get shiny things in front of five-year olds. As usual, the only way we can stop him is by opening more toys. The dragon is threatening to eat Boss Baby and the Smurfs alive. The toys are carefully organized on a clean living room table, and her palms are stretched out in front of the camera to introduce our crisis. Today, she is rescuing Boss Baby and the Smurfs from Gargamel’s Dragon. Hands (who asks I keep her real name private) uploads a video a day to each of her three channels: Fizzy Toy Show, Fizzy Fun Toys, and ZigZag Toys. ![]()
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