---
title: 'Secrets of TikTok Live Stream Supporters'
source: 'https://youtube.com/watch?v=7_riM3xGiU8'
video_id: '7_riM3xGiU8'
date: 2026-07-14
duration_sec: 334
---

# Secrets of TikTok Live Stream Supporters

> Source: [Secrets of TikTok Live Stream Supporters](https://youtube.com/watch?v=7_riM3xGiU8)

## Summary

The video exposes the dark reality behind massive TikTok live stream donations, revealing that most large-scale support is part of money laundering schemes involving brokers, celebrities, and fake accounts. The creator explains how these operations work, why they persist, and how to identify them.

### Key Points

- **Money Laundering Offers on TikTok** [00:02] — The creator received offers from brokers to launder money through TikTok live streams, with a salary plus a percentage of profits, but the brokers would control the money.
- **Earnings Conversion Rate** [00:45] — For every 100,000 points earned in a live stream, the celebrity receives 30,000 Egyptian pounds. 1 million points equals 300,000 Egyptian pounds net for the celebrity.
- **Conditions for Massive Support** [01:26] — To receive huge support, you must be a strong cover (famous and trusted). Unknown streamers earn only $6-7 per live stream.
- **Fake Supporters and Real Supporters** [02:07] — 90% of supporter accounts are fake, belonging to companies laundering money. Real supporters exist but don't give millions daily.
- **How to Identify Money Laundering** [03:49] — Look at the streamer's journey to success. If they became rich solely from support, it's illogical. If something seems off, it's likely not real.
- **Creator's Decision to Refuse** [04:17] — The creator refused the offers because he didn't need money at the time and sought mental stability. He acknowledges others might not be able to refuse.
- **Creator's Earnings from Honest Streams** [04:57] — From 15 live streams over two days, he earned only $37, as he warned people not to support and often turned off gifts.

### Conclusion

The video reveals that massive TikTok donations are often part of money laundering schemes, and viewers should be skeptical of streamers who become rich solely from support. The creator refused such offers and encourages others to question illogical support patterns.

## Transcript

us! The atmosphere is buzzing! I was offered money laundering through support on TikTok's live streams. Nader Al-Asima goes live every Friday at [time missing]. I was just innocently going live on TikTok, and after the first few live streams, I started getting strange messages. There were brokers on TikTok affiliated with
private companies, but they were offering support and live streams. So, I decided to ask what these offers were and what they entailed until I discovered the horrors of this profession. Three brokers were offering the same thing: you'll go live every month and get a salary plus a percentage of the profits you'll get from the support. We'll provide you with
monthly support and sponsors who will support you in every round, but on the condition that we sign a contract that we'll be the ones to receive the money from TikTok and give you your percentage. So, of course, I'm going to... well, you know. I'll find out at the end of the lately I've been  I'll be going live on TikTok, and I'll tell you how much I earned and
where I spent it. All of this is explained at the end of the video. Many people are asking about the value of the currency on TikTok during these rounds. I checked the percentage myself using the dollar exchange rate at the time this video was released. For every 100,000 points earned in a live stream, a celebrity
receives 30,000 Egyptian pounds. That's 1 million points worth 300,000 Egyptian pounds net, but only for the celebrity going live. So, we've settled the debate about how much these people earn. But God knows what percentage they receive if they're part of the system I'll be discussing in this video. Of course, you
ask yourself every day, "Why can't I do what these people do?" So, the question here is: if you go live, will you receive the same support, or will you just be begging for nothing? We believe that in every profession succeed.  You're a beggar and unsuccessful, and your name is Shathar (meaning "beggar"). But the people
you see receiving massive support have certain conditions that you're unlikely to meet. First, they're a very strong cover. By the way, the money they get is because I'm famous, I have people who love me and pray for me. Who are you? Who supports you? Who would believe that anyone supports you? That's why I
was surprised by my friends who also do TikTok live streams, but they're not famous and they haven't received any offers like this at all. And, poor things, they'd make six or seven dollars every time they went live. It's heartbreaking. So, the first thing is, you have to be a cover. Are you a cover? Do you need someone to
cover you? So, let me ask you a few questions. Why didn't you agree to launder money in reality? Why didn't you agree to be a pimp in reality? When you go live, you're forced to go live with scantily clad girls, and to some extent, you're also promoting... the word is heavy, to some extent.
Why are you promoting this stuff? Why don't you do it in real life? Is it because it suits you? Because if you're going to agree to the same conditions as on TikTok live streams to earn these amounts, you easily. Why don't you try it? Or is it because it's a bit cool that you agreed to it, like, "
I'll go live and get paid"? No, the most controversial question is, are these supporters real? What's the purpose? Why would someone come in and throw money around when you don't know them and you don't benefit from them at all, and we don't see any pictures of them together? Why do you find celebrities sitting on live streams getting showered with
50 or 10,000,000 points while they're just sitting there talking to people and not caring about it? If someone throws a million points or something like that, you see them suddenly becoming welcoming and all that. What about the supporters who came before? The supporters who...
These people aren't important. He knows that 90% of the accounts supporting him are laundering money, so he's used to it. He won't keep greeting this person and that person anymore, knowing it's not real. He himself... I mean, unfortunately, 90% of the supporters on TikTok aren't real at all. They're
all accounts belonging to companies that launder money with these celebrities through contracts between them. Someone might ask, "But these supporter accounts also support people who don't seem to be laundering money at all. They're just trying to beg for money to make you like them, right?" You need to paint the whole picture because this
guy is really doing a good deed. So, if we're laundering money and we give the celebrity 10%, the company takes 20%, and the person laundering the money takes 70%, what's the harm in spending another 10 or 20% to paint the complete picture that this isn't money laundering? And there are also real supporters, which are...  They support things
logically, real accounts. Some people like celebrities and support them every day, every week, every month. That happens, but it's logical. No one would support you with three or four million pounds a day. So when you find a supporter who keeps giving the same amounts every day, every week, every month,
something's wrong. You don't regret it, you never get anything out of it. Remember us, man! So how do we know if someone who goes live is a good person or not? Look at their journey to success. No one whose journey to success is based solely on support becomes incredibly rich from people supporting them. That's illogical. There's no such thing as a millionaire's journey
in the world. Look at whether they have millions of those, or if they're a reasonable person just getting by. And from experience, if you doubt anything or something does n't seem logical, then it really isn't logical and it's not real. Don't let anyone fool you. Because if I played sad music for you and you got emotional, I'd tell
you, "Guys, I've reached my goal!"  And believe me, the moment you've been waiting for has arrived. Did I accept these offers or not? No, why not? Not because I'm so respectable, not because I'm one of a kind, but because there was a time when I didn't need money at all. I was trying to find my mental stability. I was distracted
by several things and didn't want anything except to achieve inner peace. So, thank God it came to me during a time when I didn't need money, and thank God I'm still able to refuse it. God knows the circumstances of other people; they might not be able to.
If it came to you, you might not be able to resist. Even if it came to you in your professional life, whether I accepted or not doesn't reflect on my perfection. Thank God, He put me in certain circumstances that allow me to overcome tests like this. But of course, we accept for
legitimate support. My earnings from 15 live streams, which I used for two days, were $37, less than what I could withdraw. But that was because I was warning people in every live stream. People should know that I don't want anyone to support most of these live streams. I usually turn off gifts during them for a reason, too. Not because I'm
perfect, but because at that time I didn't need to tempt myself with that. I wanted to avoid this video on YouTube, turn on notifications to see the upcoming videos every Friday at this video on TikTok, this isn't my official account; it's Nader Al-Asima's account, the
program's account. Please follow us there and leave a comment. What do you think? If you were in their shoes, would you continue? Would you accept? Would you refuse? If you were in my place, share anything you think.
