I believe that T-Series doesn’t have sub-bots. But then again, I’m 100% sure it’s false that T-Series is hiring bots.
I never did trust sub-bots, never did seem trust worthy to me especially if a vast collection of sub bots were hired to do so in order to blind their viewers from the truth.
I’m not saying that T-Series did or did not hire sub-bots. I am just clearly saying that T-Series needs to look at the information given about their huge amount of subscribers. Besides you don’t necessarily need to hire sub-bots. Sub-bots can go and target any channel, popular or small, for purposes of blackmail. There’s bots that don’t need the use of hiring or controlling the bots. It can basically be done by bots themselves. YouTube has a sub-bot and notification issue right now they need to fix.
T-Series for a fact does have a very very small collection of sub-bots. It’s weird to see T-Series didn’t detected these sub-bots under their radar for 2 whole years. Like this was just unexpected to see T-Series appear so quickly that we didn’t notice until just a few months ago.
Don’t get me wrong but it could have almost 100% genuine users subbed to them, but I think T-Series has 0.5% of subscribed users being bots. It is also estimated that more than 99.95% subscribed users are actual real and verified subscribers of T-Series. (It’s just my personal estimate, you don’t have to agree with me completely).
PewDiePie has 84.3 million subscribers at the moment currently. T-Series has 84.2 million subscribers at the moment currently, T-Series is around 100K to 110K subscribers away from surpassing PewDiePie.
Remember these channels’ subscriber counts fluctuate over time
T-Series probably showcases decent Indian culture music.
I know T-Series is only targeted towards viewers in India, Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh, UAE etc. It’s just why would anybody who doesn’t speak the language want to subscribe to T-Series if there wasn’t any translated songs or multilingual closed captions for us to listen to?
Only Hindi speaking people and people who live in these said countries would only understand T-Series’s music. It’s just not fair to the rest of us who’d like to listen to these songs in English and other languages.
I just wish they can have some international music collabs; or at least have some English-speaking song artists make non-explicit rap lyrics translated in Hindi for Indians to give an opinion on. I’d love to listen to the Indian songs but with English lyrics, same Indian culture music.
And one thing for sure, is that T-Series is a multinational media company. And as it’s president stated, they don’t really care about being the No. 1 subscribed YouTube channel. You can go through T-series’s entire channel and you won’t find a single hatred video that is promoting their channel against PewDiePie.
Meaning it was 100% wrong and unnecessary for PewDiePie to act the way that he did towards T-Series.
Which makes that argument worthless to defend and support, because PewDiePie’s fanbase wrongfully attacked T-Series despite T-Series did no such harm to PewDiePie.
In the the end, it wasn’t T-Series’s fault for all the controversy on YouTube and elsewhere.
It was actually PewDiePie’s “b*tch lasagna” video, MrBeast’s actions, plus mixed reactions by fans and other channels that first started and enhanced all of this toxic controversy between PewDiePie, YouTubers, and T-Series (also racist comments and hate toward India).
I know the controversy calmed down a bit since then, cause PewDiePie addressed that it was all just a joke/meme; but every once and a while I still see hundreds to thousands of toxic users who spread loads of hate speech, racial comments, and phrases like “T-Gay”, “T-Series sucks”, “T-Series is Gay”, the “Unsubscribe to T-Series and Subscribe to PewDiePie”, etc you name it. Thank goodness that I can tolerate all that BS and ignore the negativity.
T-Series had no part in this mess, meaning they were 100% neutral about it all. They weren’t involving their company and channel into this frenzy of madness. Which on my behalf I think is very smart and I owe my respect to T-series for doing that.
I just dislike the outlook of company-owned, music artist-owned, and individually-owned channels getting unfairly unbalanced on YouTube. There needs to be a balance between individual content creators, music creators, and companies, sadly YouTube can’t achieve that.
It just seems unfair since YouTube was open to embrace all video creators of all video genres. But then I do also hold individual content creators, music creators, and companies to the same standards like it should be.
But then again it’s also economically fair for T-Series to be helping out India to benefit from all of this. Good deeds like more money and government/country funding for India and the youth being musically entertained, and donations towards international charities can all happen thanks to T-Series.
Also T-Series, just uploading one specific language group of music without any language subtitles is not going to make your company go as international as you’d wish it to be. You said you wanted to go international so go ahead do it, I’d like to see your progress so far.
Besides, it doesn’t matter as much anymore for PewDiePie, YouTube already threw away PewDiePie like a used tissue in a trashcan. While they’re making loads of revenue from India’s viewers and content creators, milking T-Series so much mainly because it’s the most popular multimedia company-owned channel on YouTube and in the Indian music industry.
Other reasons behind why PewDiePie is no longer important from a money point-of-view:
It’s that YouTube has lost interest for sponsoring PewDiePie so they turned towards India (and others: Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh and UAE) where they recently received loads of new internet users skyrocketing through the roof of exceptions due to lower phone/Internet bill costs throughout India.
YouTube doesn’t care about PewDiePie from a corporal view as much anymore, it’s a stated fact. YouTube chose T-Series over PewDiePie because international media companies would make more money than any individual content creators would themselves. It especially shows this if a popular individual content creator lost his YouTube partnership and sponsoring.
A tip to T-Series: Start adding custom international closed captions (English too) on your videos please. Not those auto-generated closed captions. And also promote English singers collaborating with Indian singers in a music video soon.
T-Series, if you’ve done so, then thanks for listening to my unbiased opinions and recommendations for your company and channel.
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