My question is and always has been, how do any You Tubers make enough money reviewing anything to cover the light bill?
I understand there are a few guys and gals who have been in the You Tube game since its inception and have millions of viewers/subscribers/etc. and get good enough exposure for companies to pay for advertising as long as they keep pulling viewers.
However, how much income can you net net net even if you have say 1M subscribers or so? Even running a "channel" has overhead as a one or two man show. Additionally, you have to prepare content, write, edit, etc., etc.
And to top it off, you have no benefits or security. And it seems like all these You Tubers have more kids than intelligence.
And this is before you understand that everyone that can't get a decent paying job / career has a "channel" or podcast or the like. So it is competitive as can be. Which drives down the pay related to advertising dollars.
So, unless they are independently wealthy (which I a tiny percentage could have a couple of bucks), how does it cash flow? And once again, having a "channel" or podcast is about as reliable a Land Rover with no benefits and no long term consistency.....
1M subscribers and a good, healthy interaction rate probably does decent. Getting in the neighborhood of 500k to 1m who watch the full length of each video probably make decent change.
Where the bigger money is made is on sponsorship deals - the adds that the youtubers themselves do. Or the videos that are entirely sponsored by a company. (I'm thinking of the Cartrek videos that Hoovie's Garage, Tavarish, and VIN Wiki did).
Also consider that they are probably able to do a tax write-off on almost anything they do associated with their channel. Car youtubers can write off vehicle purchases, mechanics' bills, and depreciation if a vehicle happens to lose value when they sell it. They can also write off their garage if they feature it in a lot of youtube videos. Hoovie's Garage has probably been able to do tax writeoffs on a lot of his new garage, for example.
But for most people in the 20k to 50k subscriber range, it probably does not pay much. A lot of those creators have burnt out in the last few years and have either barely been posting or have stopped posting altogether.