- Joined
- Oct 22, 2022
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- Sexuality
- 90% Gay, 10% Straight
I'm going to respectfully disagree, based on the number of views, subscribers, likes, and their engagement. It's not really a thing that creators can easily hide anymore. I am not saying that it is their sole income, but people don't curate the type and amount of online content that they do just for fun... it is for profit. Just by looking at their TikTok stats alone, everything has tanked over the last few months. This is to me, a clear idicator that they would like to continue to pursue being Influencers, which is a JOB that makes people money. If you have a stream of revenue that is consistently coming in, watching it drop will encourage you to reinvigorate it, and this is how they've chosen to do that.“They rely on this income.”
I really doubt that. If they are making money from their content, I’m pretty sure it pales in comparison to what they’re making from their day jobs. I don’t remember exactly what both of them do professionally, but in the case of Nick, I believe he makes a lot of money in his current job. Pretty sure his family is incredibly wealthy also. I think sharing their personal lives to strangers is a hobby to them and not a substantial source of cash.
Though, I do agree that the switch to solo/non-couples content is probably to give them time to reevaluate their relationship and how much of it they want to show. Part of it could just be they also want to evolve their content, but Dan’s cryptic post implies things are rocky.
To be brutally honest, I’m here for an evolution of their content. I’ve always thought their short skits were incredibly cringey acts of fan service and not representative at all of their relationship.