Comment on Hee Hee Ho Ho Ha Ha
DisgruntledGorillaGang@reddthat.com 1 week agoThat’s bullshit. Real jobs are physically demanding AND soul sucking. He has the luxury of a soul sucking job where he sits on his ass. Count your blessings.
Comment on Hee Hee Ho Ho Ha Ha
DisgruntledGorillaGang@reddthat.com 1 week agoThat’s bullshit. Real jobs are physically demanding AND soul sucking. He has the luxury of a soul sucking job where he sits on his ass. Count your blessings.
agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works 1 week ago
They really aren’t. I’ve worked quite a few different kinds of “real jobs”, and my soul was not sucked out. Maybe I put on a bit of a mask in customer-facing roles, but that’s temporary. All my customer-facing roles involved making myself a sort of blank company representative. No one cared about me or my identity, just my ability to navigate the customer’s demands of the business.
No “real job” has ever made any demands of my actual personality or identity. I was never judged on my opinions. I never had to modify my personality to cater to critics to secure income. That is a unique struggle of streamers. You can compare and contrast the physical difficulty or monotony of other jobs, but that wasn’t the claim. The claim is that streaming sucks out your soul in its own particular way.
DisgruntledGorillaGang@reddthat.com 1 week ago
I worked many real jobs too and they absolutely were soul-sucking. You are fortunate your jobs didn’t suck that hard.
Just because streamers have unique struggles, that doesn’t mean that no other jobs are soul-sucking.
agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works 1 week ago
Yes, that was the entire claim. No one said other jobs don’t suck out your soul. The only claims were that there is a way which is unique to streaming, and that it’s basically universal in the industry. No one’s trying to negate the fact that other jobs suck.
DisgruntledGorillaGang@reddthat.com 1 week ago
You literally did…
Gorilladrums@lemmy.world 1 week ago
I see you’ve never worked in sales
agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works 1 week ago
I think sales touches on it, but still the persona you adopt is a “sales representative”. You are selling a product, your insincerity is locked to the product, with a few curated pithy anecdotes to flesh out the role. It’s closer to acting. You’re using charisma to make the sale, but you still take your hat off at the end of the day. You interact with a few individuals over the course of the day, and likely never see them again. If you do have an ongoing relationship with clients, it’s one-on-one and segregated. And you can choose how much you want to rely on a persona, you can do sales from a position of relative sincerity if you actually believe in the product.
With streamers, their identity is the product. They aren’t using charisma to sell cars or vacuum cleaners or medical equipment, they are selling their personality. A sales representative doesn’t have to change their being when market research demands a change in product. If a streamer wants to change their product, they have to change themselves, or at least their persistent persona. Because it isn’t one-on-one and segregated, they have to be their persona all the time for thousands of anonymous commenters at once. It’s fundamentally existential. You can’t do it another way, it’s endemic to the industry
Gorilladrums@lemmy.world 1 week ago
Online personalities, like professional streamers, don’t actual reveal their real personalities and identities. They use personas that are carefully curated to grow and maintain their audience. These personas are the brand, that’s what they’re selling. Like sure, you need to be witty and charismatic to draw people in, but that could be said about any job in any field. The same could be said about people changing due to their job. A person’s job is a big part of their identity, and so it makes sense that streamers are influenced by their jobs like everybody else. I don’t see anything that’s uniquely stressful to being a professional streamer.