Welcome to our rundown of the most-watched branded YouTube videos of the week.
We’re publishing this snippet of a larger Gospel Stats Weekly Brand Report in order to analyze sponsorship trends in the creator economy. Any video launched in tandem with an official brand partner is eligible for the ranking.
And – as the name up above would imply – all the data comes from Gospel Stats. If you’re interested in learning more about Gospel – and which brands are sponsoring what creators on YouTube – click here.
The Super Bowl has headlined YouTube‘s top sponsored videos for a few weeks, and though it’s now past, our latest Gospel Stats Weekly Brand Report is still led by football–just, you know, the other kind. Also high up on this week’s list are a smorgasbord of internet classics: memes, Minecraft, questionable vehicular activities, and befriending a wild animal.
Check it...
We’re publishing this snippet of a larger Gospel Stats Weekly Brand Report in order to analyze sponsorship trends in the creator economy. Any video launched in tandem with an official brand partner is eligible for the ranking.
And – as the name up above would imply – all the data comes from Gospel Stats. If you’re interested in learning more about Gospel – and which brands are sponsoring what creators on YouTube – click here.
The Super Bowl has headlined YouTube‘s top sponsored videos for a few weeks, and though it’s now past, our latest Gospel Stats Weekly Brand Report is still led by football–just, you know, the other kind. Also high up on this week’s list are a smorgasbord of internet classics: memes, Minecraft, questionable vehicular activities, and befriending a wild animal.
Check it...
- 3/4/2024
- by James Hale
- Tubefilter.com
Alex Ernst is unmistakable.
From shortform video app Vine to YouTube, Ernst has pulled in millions of fans with his signature moves: deadpan voiceovers, off-the-wall humor, and copious amounts of apple cider vinegar.
Ernst joined YouTube in 2009, but didn’t start seriously producing content for the platform until after Vine's shuttering in 2017. On Vine, where Ernst made content from 2013 till its closure, he garnered nearly a million followers, and had more than 9 million ‘Loops,’ or views of his various Vines.
With his YouTube channel, he's reached bigger milestones: 15.7 million views and more than one million subscribers, making him an official YouTube Millionaire.
Now, Ernst has set his sights on an even loftier accomplishment, and he’s here at Tubefilter to talk about it -- in true Alex Ernst fashion.
Visit Tubefilter for more great stories.
From shortform video app Vine to YouTube, Ernst has pulled in millions of fans with his signature moves: deadpan voiceovers, off-the-wall humor, and copious amounts of apple cider vinegar.
Ernst joined YouTube in 2009, but didn’t start seriously producing content for the platform until after Vine's shuttering in 2017. On Vine, where Ernst made content from 2013 till its closure, he garnered nearly a million followers, and had more than 9 million ‘Loops,’ or views of his various Vines.
With his YouTube channel, he's reached bigger milestones: 15.7 million views and more than one million subscribers, making him an official YouTube Millionaire.
Now, Ernst has set his sights on an even loftier accomplishment, and he’s here at Tubefilter to talk about it -- in true Alex Ernst fashion.
Visit Tubefilter for more great stories.
- 2/7/2019
- by James Loke Hale
- Tubefilter.com
YouTube star Jimmy ‘MrBeast’ Donaldson, who has amassed 12.5 million subscribers thanks to social experiments and stunts that often involve large sums of cash, just hosted a competition pitting some of the platform’s buzziest popular stars against one another for a $100,000 prize.
In short, the 12 YouTubers -- Leon Lush, Danny Duncan, Caspar Lee, Alex Ernst, Mini Ladd, Joogsquad, Faze Rug, Faze Rain, Faze Adapt, Callux, WillNE, Ricegum, and Faze Tfue -- had to simply stand in a spray-painted circle for as long as possible. It's a concept that Donaldson has explored on his channel before -- but this time, contestants weren't allowed to sit down, and, every hour, they were saddled with 1 pound of weight onto a special vest that each was wearing.
Rapper Ricegum left the circle immediately after the contest began -- though, over the course of the 24-minute video, other creators truly tested their limits amid several surprises orchestrated by Donaldson,...
In short, the 12 YouTubers -- Leon Lush, Danny Duncan, Caspar Lee, Alex Ernst, Mini Ladd, Joogsquad, Faze Rug, Faze Rain, Faze Adapt, Callux, WillNE, Ricegum, and Faze Tfue -- had to simply stand in a spray-painted circle for as long as possible. It's a concept that Donaldson has explored on his channel before -- but this time, contestants weren't allowed to sit down, and, every hour, they were saddled with 1 pound of weight onto a special vest that each was wearing.
Rapper Ricegum left the circle immediately after the contest began -- though, over the course of the 24-minute video, other creators truly tested their limits amid several surprises orchestrated by Donaldson,...
- 12/13/2018
- by Geoff Weiss
- Tubefilter.com
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