interesting, because you talk about people who remember her or don t remember her growing up, her teachers, they don t remember her as someone who was political as you mentioned a moment ago, somebody who was outspoken and wanted to be, on the front lines of shaping policy in this country, but you say she was looking for an identity, did you get a sense of whether she believes some of the stuff that she spouts, some of these conspiracy theories? i think that at the beginning, she was certainly drawn in by them, as i said, i think that she has explained before that the russia collusion narrative early on quote-unquote gave her a promotion structure basically to believe in things like q-anon and that the clintons were, you know, running a ring of pedophilia in the basement of a washington, d.c. pizza restaurant, which is of course, you know, quite an explanation for it, but to answer your question more pointedly, i would say that as much as she was kinds of roped
your soup be a bulletproof vest. please save my life, chili pepper. it worked. what s that? dama dang it. its creator has made over $100,000 there. it s the ads i guess that are bringing ing all the money in. what kind of ads decide they want to advertise? yeah. it s interesting, on youtube it s easy to rack up a lot of hits quickly because it has a good promotion structure and so people start to get a lot of viewers and the ads are across the board. advertisers have said, we re willing to the thing the interesting thing is they re not paying a ton of money. it really is dependent on all of those streams. some have said we re willing to take the risk because this is where the eyeballs. they may be 14-year-olds now but