this post was submitted on 18 Dec 2023
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Smaller streams make more sense to me. It's like a virtual social setting, an old school chatroom, but with a focus of attention, and a guy kind of structuring the whole thing, and a guy who can be engaged with. Occasionally, the streamer can be cool, most of the time they're kind of a goblin, though, so the good streams are few and far between.
Larger streams don't make much sense unless you kind of view them as being like, the same appeal as talk radio, or something, because the chat scrolls way too fast and most of it is emotes, so most messages will never get read, and never have anything good to say in the first place. There's not much of an advantage for any of it to be live content, it just sort of is a relic of the format. Sometimes you get higher production stuff, most of the time it's just some bald asshole ranting about the prices of things in costco and doing other bad stand up bits.
Edit: Also a big appeal is how brainrotted people are. The focus (I'm generalizing now across all internet platforms) is less on some specific information, and is more on "personality" and appeals like that, because that's the most sustainable way to pump out a metric ton of content at all times, and algorithms tend to reward when you pump out a ton of content. And so you get a lot of parasocial relationships and non-content, and viewers, frankly, just watch whatever's in front of them. There's not a lot of control these platforms, increasingly, give you over what you're watching anyways, and people aren't going to keep pulling that skinner's box lever unless they get a hit at some point. Most of the content ends up being dogshit, so you get a kind of selection for people who enjoy dogshit, and a lack of other options, so people just acclimate to their lack of alternative and become kind of complacent in their environment.
For twitch more specifically, you also basically just get shit that's meant to only reward people's dopamine centers, when they get their message read by the streamer, and then they keep pulling the lever on the slot machine over and over multiple times per stream. Either that, right, or you're getting a lot of people who just don't have many social relationships, and just want to feel like they're part of a larger organization, or being, even if it's totally mindless and meaningless. People who want to "turn off" and just kind of mindlessly be part of the flow of the chat, or what have you. That last part is the brainrot, basically.