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YouTube announced in September it would start sharing ad revenue with creators on Shorts in 2023. Then, a week later, YouTube announced that in 2023 it would begin sharing ad revenue from Shorts with creators. For short-form content, YouTube will allocate an undisclosed amount of ad revenue to record labels to secure music licensing. Industry insiders warn that creators should temper expectationsWhile creators are hopeful about the payouts to come from YouTube Shorts, some industry insiders say they should quell their excitement and worry that expectations might not be met. There is an intentionality that comes with selecting and watching a long-form video that the endless scroll of a vertical feed doesn't allow for.
YouTube announced in September it would start sharing ad revenue with creators on Shorts in 2023. Then, a week later, YouTube announced that in 2023 it would begin sharing ad revenue from Shorts with creators. For short-form content, YouTube will allocate an undisclosed amount of ad revenue to record labels to secure music licensing. Industry insiders warn that creators should temper expectationsWhile creators are hopeful about the payouts to come from YouTube Shorts, some industry insiders say they should quell their excitement and worry that expectations might not be met. There is an intentionality that comes with selecting and watching a long-form video that the endless scroll of a vertical feed doesn't allow for.
And artists like Beyoncé and Megan Thee Stallion have incorporated Southern Black aesthetics into their fashion and music videos. “We’re now seeing some of the vividness and vibrancy that has always been a part of the South,” Durham said. But in these shows, the South and its characters refuse the bumpkin stereotypes and embrace all the aspects of the South. “There are whole ways in which we are having to reimagine Blackness in the South,” Durham said. “We’re actually invited to see what the experiences are of the people who produce the culture,” Durham said.
When Paul Sullivan was hired to write his "Wealth Matters" column in The New York Times 13 years ago, Americans' relationships with wealth and wealthy people were undergoing a rapid shift. I was told I could create the 'Wealth Matters' column when Lehman Brothers collapsed," he says. Among his biggest takeaways: "I always drew the line between people who are wealthy and people who are rich," he says. 1 money habit of wealthy peopleOver the course of his tenure writing the column, Sullivan talked to nearly 5,000 sources about wealth in America. The article "The Difference Between ‘Rich’ and ‘Wealthy,’ According to New York Times ‘Wealth Matters’ Columnist″ was originally published on Grow (CNBC + Acorns).
During that time, they also paid off Brennan's $38,500 in student loans, two cars, an engagement ring, and a bed. Brennan graduated from college in 2014 with a finance degree, a couple of major expenses, and no immediate income. Here's how the couple paid off their six-figure debt and plan to hit a net worth of $1 million in 2022. In June 2021, one of their highest-earning months with Budgetdog, they threw an extra $30,000 at the mortgage, Brennan said. "September was the first month that we didn't have a mortgage and we saved 75% of our income," said Brennan.
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