Showing posts with label Social Star Creator Camp. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Social Star Creator Camp. Show all posts

Friday, August 4, 2017

Steps To Becoming A Social Media Star?


It’s a beautiful day, and I’m standing in a courtyard of a private university east of L.A. surrounded by 40 teenagers, most of them desiring to become the next Internet sensation..


The youngest are here for SocialStar Creator Camp, which is designed to turn them into social media superstars able to produce content that will attract adoring followers and corporate sponsors willing to pay top dollar for Internet “influencers” to promote their products. And then there’s me, the analog guy who has yet to post a YouTube video.

My fellow campers are from all over. There’s a 13-year-old singer from San Francisco and a 13-year-old boy from Sonora, Mexico, here to learn about vlogging (video-blogging), a 17-year-old South African who needs help with video editing, and a Puerto Rican, back for a second summer, who believes Internet fame will help him become a DJ and party planner.

In the shade of a dormitory breezeway, two teens from Idaho are flirting with a 12-year-old from Sweden who likes shoes and plans to start a YouTube channel that reviews footwear. They soon are joined by a young comedian, who hopes the skits she posts on YouTube will lead one day to a job on Saturday Night Live, and a fashion-conscious 14-year-old whose goal is to make time-lapse videos that show her designing and making casual clothes.



Most parents, it seems fair to generalize, would rather their kids spend less time, not more, on social media.

They obsess over how much “screen time” to allow their children each day. And many no doubt see summer as a prime opportunity to wean their adolescents from the all-consuming devices that seem increasingly to rule their lives. They remember when summer meant riding horses, canoeing, and learning to tie knots (save for the humbling sheepshank) at a camp named after some dispossessed Indian tribe. The more zealous among them would probably recoil in horror from a camp that doubles down on social media. It would strike them as going over to the dark side.

But then most parents also look for small shoots of ambition among their offspring that they can encourage and nurture. And that’s decidedly the case with the campers I’m meeting here. Kids like 12-year-old Ryan Hildebrand, an A-student from Seattle. “Ryan has an entrepreneurial spark and social media is his passion,” says his mother Kelli. “We just wanted to help him express himself more creatively.” Oregon mother Stephanie Rosenaur, who grew up in Michigan and loves to go camping, says her A-student daughter Aria, 14, lives in a social media world where teenage girls don’t even talk on the phone anymore. “They just text,” she sighs. “She works so hard we can’t complain, and her whole generation is trending this way.”



Camp officially begins in a nearby auditorium named after film star Mary Pickford with inspirational remarks by social media personality Michael Buckley, author of Help! My Kid Wants to Become a YouTuber.

“How old were all of you when YouTube started in 2005?” he shouts. “Four,” respond several young actors here to learn how to better promote themselves. “Well, now is the time to start growing your following on YouTube,” says Buckley, not missing a beat. “You’re an entrepreneur by nature. Learn skills here that will help shape your brand.”

Buckley, 42, strongly believes post-millennial kids belonging to the Generation Z cohort no longer grow up wanting to be doctors or firemen. They want to be YouTubers, he insists, before turning to the assembled campers and exhorting them to follow their dreams. “You’ll face doubters,” he cautions, “but they are like those people drinking champagne on the top deck of the Titanic. You are the iceberg.”

Facebook is still the largest social network, with 2 billion monthly users, 1.32 billion of whom log in every day and spend 20 minutes online. But YouTube’s 1.5 billion users make it a formidable runner-up.



Roughly a billion hours of its content is being watched daily around the world. YouTube’s video format is especially popular with advertisers because the level of engagement of its users (38 percent female, 62 percent male) can be easily quantified.

Imagination and a smartphone are the only things necessary to make a good YouTube video, which is why 300 hours of video are uploaded to YouTube every minute.

Social media is more than a duopoly, of course. Snapchat (approaching 200 million users) and Instagram both publish photos, captions, brief videos, and conversations sparked by all of the above, though Instagram with 700 million users appears to be winning the race. About 328 million people around the world regularly use Twitter in 35 languages. (LinkedIn also qualifies as social media, though most of its 500 million members use the site only as a repository for their digital résumés.)

In addition to serving as an exchange for photos, videos, and messages, social media’s affordability makes it an advertising favorite. “Companies are constantly looking for social media influencers who can engage a large following so that subscribers to the channel will promote the product through word-of-mouth marketing,” explains Barika Croom, 32, a co-founder of B3 Media Solutions in Los Angeles. Croom manages social media for Hyundai and Toyota.



“Analytics are so precise that we know how many people see an influencer video, how long they watch, who they tell, and whether the video changes the public conversation.”

After lunch, Croom lectures campers as young as 10 on how to monetize content on different social media platforms. She then gives them 30 minutes to create a product and shoot and edit a three-minute commercial on their phones. The winning entry, about a cell phone that can be charged by holding it next to a tree, is conceived by a 12-year-old Little Leaguer from Seattle.

When former Los Angeles social worker Nichelle Rodriguez began planning the SocialStar Creator Camp two years ago, it primarily was geared toward teenage actors who believed a social media presence might help them land roles. Before long, parents of younger kids already on YouTube and Instagram began asking for classes that would help their children create better content.

“Huge amounts of money breed intense competition in social media,” says Rodriguez. “Technical and business skills taught here provide the extra push toward success.”



Pundits spent most of 2016 insisting that America’s youth strongly support Bernie Sanders.

This may be the case when it comes to reducing poverty and making college affordable. But not when it comes to the socialism part: The kids at social media camp are committed entrepreneurs fully invested in Western capitalism. Their goal is business success, not Hollywood stardom.

Workshops at the camp ranged from set lighting and video editing to web series production and Internet security. By the end of the third day, campers had learned how to shoot a music video and build an in-house recording studio.

These courses may seem more appropriate for the USC and NYU film schools. In fact, most campers have logged more time behind and in front of a camera than any incoming film student of decades past. Certainly they have the money to pay university tuition.

Sophia Montero, a 13-year-old singer from Miami who is known online as “Angelic,” has a YouTube channel with more than 900,000 subscribers. At age 9 she covered an Ariana Grande song called “Problem” in an upload that has since attracted 32 million views. Her music videos have been viewed more than 150 million times. While she was at camp, her immigrant parents from Venezuela were house hunting in the San Fernando Valley.



“I’m just a normal kid who rides bikes ’n’ stuff,” she smiles. “I don’t care about money. I just want Mom to have everything and for us to lead a full life.”

Spend time browsing social media and it becomes clear why so many consumers are cutting the cable cord. Most YouTube videos may not have the structure or production values of commercial television, but many of the channels are weirdly addictive. “Bad Lip Reading” spoofs film, TV, and political news clips by overdubbing hilariously incongruous vocals that match the lip movements. Grant Thompson’s “The King of Random” confronts weekend projects and humorous experiments in videos that meld MacGyver and MythBusters with Watch Mr. Wizard.

YouTube’s two richest content creators are radically different. One is a foul-mouthed Swede named Felix Arvid Ulf Kjellberg who goes by the online pseudonym PewDiePie. PewDiePie is a gamer whose irreverent clips—most giving the viewer a look over his shoulder as he plays video games and comments on them—have earned him around $90 million and attracted more than 56 million followers he calls the “Bro Army.”



YouTube’s biggest star was profiled on the front page of the Wall Street Journal earlier this year under the headline “Every 20-Something Knows This Woman; Do You?”

Her name is Lilly Singh and her 610 video riffs on social foibles have been viewed over two trillion times. Singh, 28, earned $7.5 million last year, according to Forbes, thanks to hilarious videos like “If White Walkers Were Teenage Girls” and “5 Things Guys Do That Girls Love.”

Singh credits her seven years on YouTube with helping her get two film roles, fund a touring variety show, and publish a book. Says Singh: “When I walk into an audition, the casting agent knows that I bring a very large online audience with me and that my audience is ready to support me in my future projects.”

It’s exactly that sort of synergy that prompted Alyssa Lebarron, an aspiring 15-year-old actress from Denver, to attend social media camp. “I was in one Subway commercial, but I’ve missed other roles because I lacked a social media presence,” she confides. “Casting directors always are looking for web stars because they are easier to promote.”



The road to stardom used to start with a lucky break.

After getting into a bar fight, a noticeably bruised Mel Gibson agreed to drive a friend to an audition the next morning where he was spotted by a director who thought he might fit into a dystopian movie called Mad Max. Charlize Theron was approached by a casting director in a bank after she got into an argument with a teller who was reluctant to withdraw money from her South African account. The pathway to fame now begins at YouTube.

Exhibit A: The HBO comedy series Insecure, starring Issa Rae, which began its second season last month, was born six years ago on YouTube under the title The Misadventures of Awkward Black Girl.

The entrepreneurial spirit of the campers is reciprocated by corporate America, which is embracing social media as a way to reach a younger generation that communicates in ways their baby boomer parents find utterly foreign. Recent studies by Georgetown linguistics professor Deborah Tannen show that today’s students prefer to transact all business online, are reluctant to seek information on the phone, and, perhaps most surprising, text each other even more once they become roommates.



For all the benefits it offers to marketers, though, social media remains a two-edged sword.

“Unlike traditional advertising, which is a one-way communication, social media allows a dialogue with the customer,” says Larry Light, CEO of Arcature, a marketing consulting firm, and author of Six Rules for Brand Revitalization. “You have to remember that your dialogue is not private. The whole world is listening and your good intentions can be misinterpreted.”

That’s what happened last March when after the Boston Marathon Adidas emailed to race participants, “Congrats, you survived the Boston Marathon.” Within minutes the Twitterverse exploded, criticizing Adidas for its insensitivity just four years after the 2013 marathon bombing.

Adidas rebounded from its gaffe with a quick apology. United Airlines is still suffering from its muddled response to a video of its forcible removal of a passenger. Southwest Airlines hopes to eliminate misunderstandings before they happen by keeping a Listening Center at its Dallas Love Field headquarters staffed around the clock with employees who monitor social media looking for complaints they can respond to in real time. “Social listening to live tweets is an early-warning system that lets our ground staff know there may be a situation,” says social business team manager Ashley Mainz.



Back in Los Angeles at the SocialStar Creator Camp social media’s next generation has less weighty concerns.

Brazilian Sophia Fuchs, 15, from the suburbs of São Paulo is excited about what life has to offer.

Her videos about teenage life have been viewed over 1.5 million times during the past three years, and now she’s starting to do commercials about school supplies.

“I get invited to beach resorts and people stop me on the street to take pictures,” she smiles brightly. With a combined 450,000 followers on YouTube and Instagram, does she want to be a social media superstar, I ask? “I don’t know,” she says. “I like math and science a lot.”

Guest Authored By David DeVoss. David is is editor of the East-West News Service in Los Angeles.





In addition to serving as an exchange for photos, videos, and messages, social media’s affordability makes it an advertising favorite.

“Companies are constantly looking for social media influencers who can engage a large following so that subscribers to the channel will promote the product through word-of-mouth marketing,” explains Barika Croom, 32, a co-founder of B3 Media Solutions in Los Angeles.."


    • Authored by:
      Fred Hansen Pied Piper of Social Media Marketing at YourWorldBrand.com & CEO of Millennium 7 Publishing Co. in Loveland, Colorado. I work deep in the trenches of social media strategy, community management and trends.  My interests include; online business educator, social media marketing, new marketing technology, skiing, hunting, fishing and The Rolling Stones..-Not necessarily in that order ;)

    Tuesday, March 28, 2017

    Social Media Influencer Camp For Teens?


    Social Media Camp: a 10-day course on lighting and how to be an 'Influencer' - For $2,690, the Social Star Creator Camp says it will teach teenagers the digital skills they need to become social media ‘influencers’ – is it too good to be true?


    If you are the parent of teenagers, here are three words that may make you shudder: Social Media Camp..

    Rather than wean adolescents off Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and YouTube, a 10-day course aims to deepen their immersion in online platforms to turn them into social media “influencers” and “stars”.

    The camp, which is due to launch in Los Angeles and spread to Britain, Australia and Japan, says proper use of phones, tablets and laptops is the key to Hollywood-style success. “Whatever your skills and areas of interests are, there is a social media channel out there that will help you reach the stratosphere of fame and fortune.”


    It is the brainchild of Nichelle Rodriguez, 48, a social worker-turned entrepreneur who has run a youth acting camp near LA for 18 years and now thinks social media is the future. “Social media is fast overtaking everything. The interest is incredible,” she said. “The camp is a business incubator. The sole purpose is monetizing and learning the business.”


    The Social Star Creator Camp bills itself as “the first sleepaway course for teens dedicated to professional growth and monetary success on social media platforms”. It will run from 8-17 July at the University of La Verne, 35 miles east of LA.

    Similar camps will run in London in August and in Sydney and Japan next year, the venues to be confirmed, Rodriguez said. “This is a camp for those who want success – who want to grow their audience and engagement.” Each camp – the antithesis to rehab courses for teens addicted to social media – has 300 places.

    For $2,690, the LA participants are promised room and board, tours, technical workshops, instruction from established social media influencers and advice from companies seeking talent to promote corporate brands. Airport pickup, camp T-shirts and some meals cost extra.


    The camp’s promotional blurb cites Adele and Justin Bieber as examples of social media’s springboard power. It also cites teens who have turned sports, food, fashion, makeup, comedy and other interests into big online followings.


    “The more people know you and love you, the more famous you are, right! All you have to do is to let your skill and your personality shine, trust yourself, be consistent and let the social users recognize your uniqueness.”

    Dozens have signed up for the LA camp since registration opened this month, Rodriguez said. Four of them attended a film lighting workshop in LA last week, a warmup for the camp.

    “I really want to publicize myself more to have people more intrigued – and to be worth their time,” said Brooke Alyse, 18, from Sydney. She hopes that growing her 10,100 Instagram followers will boost her chances of becoming an actor.


    The camp’s website dangles the prospect of being discovered. “If you have a larger than life personality you can even be approached by a movie executive to star in a cool flick.”


    December Ensminger, 18, from Arkansas, said she got serious about social media at the ripe age of 14 – “I was a late bloomer” – and that she also wished to pursue acting. “I want to be able to market myself and figure out my own image.”

    Ominous words for those who fret about teens spending too much time on social media. Some critics cite a different concern: parents wasting money and children nurturing unrealistic dreams.

    Hollywood has a long tradition of parting naive outsiders from their cash with bold promises of fame and fortune, according to Anne Henry, co-founder of BizParentz Foundation, a nonprofit that advises families in the entertainment industry. The explosion in social media has fueled delusions, she said. “Now we think anybody can be a star. Which means every parent is open to scams.”


    Rodriguez insists that in social media anybody really can be a star – and make serious money. Teenagers have always pursued hobbies and passions, and now they have a chance to monetize them. “We’re just lucky that we’re in this era where there’s a dollar attached to it all.”


    With enough dedication, she said, a teen can find an audience that draws advertising revenue. “If you make the numbers, the advertisers are in.” The camp can accelerate the learning curve, Rodriguez said. “It takes three years off the process.”

    The camp’s aim is to help teens as young as 13 to define their personal brands so they can earn cash endorsing products, said Sara Gertler, the camp’s business development manager. “Stay true to your brand because that’s when you’re most interesting to advertisers.”

    Alyse, the budding actor, said she would endorse only products she believed in. Social media, she said, meant her generation could avoid career drudge. “You don’t have to do a job you don’t like any more.”


    At the workshop an Austrian film-maker, Leopold Keber, gave tips on framing and lighting. “You can really get a lot of your story across in the setting,” he told the four students.


    Raphael Capulong, 14, from the Philippines, said the tutorial would benefit his YouTube channel. “I’d like to do better video production.”

    Not all participants dream of stardom.

    Lauren Kelly, 15, the only LA local among the four students, said she was looking forward to the camp and to launching her own YouTube channel. Her goal, however, was not fame, fortune or branding. “I’m not really into that. I’m just posting stuff. It’s a way of being social, connecting with friends.” She hopes to become a pediatric nurse.

    Lauren’s mother, Kymberlee Kelly, said she and her husband hope the camp will be fun and nourish a hobby. “We tell all our children to follow the path that God has chosen. We’re not looking for her to become a brand.”

    Guest Authored By Rory Carroll. Rory is a Journalist for The Guardian, Los Angeles Bureau. Follow Rory on Twitter.





    "Rodriguez insists that in social media anybody really can be a star – and make serious money.

    Teenagers have always pursued hobbies and passions, and now they have a chance to monetize them. “We’re just lucky that we’re in this era where there’s a dollar attached to it all.”

    With enough dedication, she said, a teen can find an audience that draws advertising revenue. “If you make the numbers, the advertisers are in.”

    The camp can accelerate the learning curve, Rodriguez said. “It takes three years off the process.."


      • Authored by:
        Fred Hansen Pied Piper of Social Media Marketing at GetMoreHere.com & CEO of Millennium 7 Publishing Co. in Loveland, Colorado. I work deep in the trenches of social media strategy, community management and trends.  My interests include; online business educator, social media marketing, new marketing technology, skiing, hunting, fishing and The Rolling Stones..-Not necessarily in that order ;)
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