Doctor MJ wrote:Odinn21 wrote:Taylor however is making money out of these stuff and knowing that some of his personal assumptions/notes are just inaccurate makes me more critical than average follower of him.
This makes sense, just make sure you're drawing a distinction between big time mainstream people and ElGee.
I know that this is something that's consider more analytical than art, but I'll share a story from music.
I had a cynical student who said she was 100% fine with torrenting all her music because musicians were already making their money.
Meanwhile my favorite musical artist of the 2010s at her very best was living below my teacher's lifestyle and when her stuff proved a bit too edgy for her indie music label, they dropped her. She is, from my perspective, the single best musical artist of the 2010s, and I don't know if she'll ever release an album again. And meanwhile there are people who seem to assume folks like her must be living a glamourous pop star lifestyle.
For people who like the mainstream stuff - the boring, unchallenging, formulaic stuff - the artists they listen to don't need money. Those on the edge often are living far closer to the brink than those on the outside realize.
Back to basketball:
If Stephen A is your man, then you don't need to worry about your favorite content providers losing money, but if you like ElGee, well, know that he could be making more money if he were still in his non-basketball industry, and had he stayed there, we wouldn't have anyone doing the stuff he's doing.
I never cared about any of ESPN stuff (and not just about basketball) like ever. Or something like that.
Taylor's making money from what he loves to do, which is great for him and us, his audience. I'm a subscriber on his Patreon. I'm giving him 4 USD per month while minimum wage in where I live is like 400 USD (I do better but not much better, 4 USD + VAT per month is still somewhat significant amount).
I mean, if I were a person cared about mainstream stuff - especially in a way you put it, I wouldn't care about any of it. I wouldn't care Taylor's content, I wouldn't care if he gets money, I wouldn't care if he has some inaccurate notions at any point and I wouldn't care to comment at all.
It's a bit personal more than usual for me because like I said, being a non-US person kept me away from doing what I love and also making money from it. English isn't my native language, it's limiting on different levels. Being a content creator in a secondary language is not easy and drawing people into basketball, and more importantly to the hard stuff of it, in a language other than English is extremely hard. If I try to talk anyone in my country that how LeBron James' patterns to attack the rim changed over time from how to beat his man to how to beat the entire defense and it's mostly about how he changed use of his left shoulder, etc, they're bored out of their mind.
This may not sound good but he's living my dream life and that leads me to expect that he lives up to the potential there is.
I think this topic is dragged out for too long. I'll leave it alone after saying a few more things.
There's a saying in my native language and "the tree that bears fruit will be stoned" would be its translation I guess. And my criticism is nothing like it. The initial two responses to my latest criticism built as if I did that. Amares' response sounded like it until he cleared out that it wasn't his personal stance and Jordan Syndrome blatantly ranted about that. (My post wasn't that much of a criticism BTW...) I voiced a concern but this debate going on is not on me.
And I don't think my criticism of Taylor is just too much. For many of his followers, they see a person who put immense time and effort to these things, probably more so than themselves. He's the golden boy of these things. I see a fellow researcher like me, a peer and sometimes I think he could do better.
Lastly and most importantly, I certainly do not like that it's gotten to a point that I had to explain all these, especially the part that I pay Taylor myself. That alone gives me more power to be critical of him than majority of his audience. But I shouldn't feel a need mention that in the first place. And all the need for these explanations felt like coercion. Heck, I didn't have to give any explanation about my personal situation at all but I just felt that I needed to be overly explanative.
Next time around, if I ever post a thing about Ben Taylor, any of you don't agree with it and doesn't have anything else to say than just to point out my disagreement, just carry on.