powertools":262axaa3 said:
If you hadn't come on here the likes of Mikeg or Richard Jones would not have found your vid ...
You're right. I certainly wouldn't have sought out tomosap's video, and I'd say it's almost a certainty that I'll never watch another one, unless someone else puts up a link to an example of his that illustrates some spectacularly difficult and meticulously and flawlessly crafted technical tour-de-force. Run-of-the mill woodworking skills, whether machine or hand skills demonstrated on film or video hold no interest for me which is, I suppose, why I like to know the credentials of the people I'm supposed to be paying attention too.
But that's my particular focus, the knowledge and potential learning that might be available, and I guess I'd forgotten that there's a massive viewing market out there for what I can only think of as visual candyfloss; the woodworking equivalent of all those pointless (to me) videos of cute cats, doggy antics, funny children, and all sorts of wedding dance pratfalls. As others have said, it's possible I suppose that the truly instructive woodworking stuff out there on YouTube struggles to find an audience because it's too difficult, too involved, too boring and way beyond the skill level of non-woodworking viewers that chance upon it. The quick clever looking tricks, probably most of which may not be considered serious or properly joined-up woodworking, may well get a lot more hits because they appeal to casual browsers looking for a bit of entertainment.
Still, tomosap came across as personable and likeable in his one video to date, so that seems to me like a decent start ... but will he end up having to go down the woodworking flim-flam and candyfloss route to get a decent following? Who knows, ha, ha? Slainte.