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Becoming a Famous Streamer Is Actually Easy

0h 15m video Transcribed Jul 15, 2026
Intermediate 8 min read For: Aspiring live streamers and content creators looking to grow their audience through viral clips.

AI Summary

This video presents a strategy for growing a live streaming channel by using viral clips. The creator argues that simply cutting and posting clips is not enough; clips need a pre-defined format that triggers emotional reactions. The method is illustrated through the case study of streamer Fernando Gil, whose clips went viral due to the generation gap between him and his troll viewers. The video then provides a step-by-step plan for applying this strategy, including competitor analysis, account setup, and content creation.

[00:02]
Becoming a famous streamer is easy

The video claims that becoming a famous streamer is easy and promises to teach techniques to grow live streams for free.

[00:42]
The method of cutting live streams

The method of cutting live streams is widely taught but only covers basics. Simply cutting clips without a format leads to flops.

[01:09]
Example of effective clip

A clip that elicits an emotional reaction (like the Baphomet example) is more effective than a plain clip.

[01:52]
Case study: Fernando Gil

Fernando Gil, a football analyst, experienced exponential growth when his subscribers' clips went viral. The key was the generation gap between him (50s) and trolls (18-24).

[03:39]
Coffee filter funnel analogy

The funnel has four parts: top (people who don't know the streamer), upper middle (watched but didn't pay attention), lower middle (watched but didn't seek content), bottom (watched but stopped). The 'filtered coffee' are recurring followers.

[05:30]
Many people sharing clips

The more people sharing clips, the more videos go viral, leading to a huge number of people discovering the channel.

[06:21]
Plan and understand your niche

You need to understand what type of live stream you do and who you want to be. Map the five most famous people in your niche and study their content, audience, and viral clips.

[07:40]
80/20 rule

80% of time should be spent studying and analyzing, 20% on creating content based on studies.

[08:07]
Pre-defined format for clips

Clips should have a pre-defined format that triggers emotional reactions like laughter, absurd statements, or insults.

[08:47]
Avoid shadowban: account setup

Do not post immediately. On day 1, register account info. On days 2-3, complete profile and interact with niche pages. Start posting on day 4.

[09:56]
Scenario 1: No money, few viewers

Cut funniest jokes and reactions into short videos for all platforms. Prepare at least 30 clips for a month of daily posting. Optionally, promote the best-performing video with R$6/day for 30 days.

[12:06]
Scenario 2: Co-op games with friends

Play co-op games like Chains Together to generate insults and cancelable phrases for viral clips.

[12:48]
Scenario 3: Fake reactions with donations

Use a different account to send controversial super chats and react flamboyantly. This is risky and may seem forced.

[14:27]
Key to virality: emotional reaction

Clips must involve emotional reactions like laughter, absurd statements, or insults. Be 'hot or cold, never lukewarm'.

The video emphasizes that growing a live stream through clips requires a strategic approach: study competitors, create clips with emotional impact, and post consistently. The method works best when the content triggers strong reactions, and the creator advises against faking reactions.

Clickbait Check

70% Legit

"The title promises easy fame, but the video delivers a detailed strategy that requires effort, so it's slightly exaggerated."

Mentioned in this Video

Tutorial Checklist

1 06:21 Understand your live stream type and target audience.
2 06:47 Map the five most famous competitors in your niche.
3 06:59 Study competitors' content, audience, and viral clips.
4 07:40 Spend 80% of time on analysis, 20% on content creation.
5 08:47 Create a new account and avoid immediate posting: day 1 register info, days 2-3 complete profile and interact, day 4 start posting.
6 09:56 Prepare at least 30 clips for a month of daily posting.
7 11:01 Optionally, promote the best-performing video with R$6/day for 30 days.

Study Flashcards (6)

What is the main reason clips from Fernando Gil went viral?

easy Click to reveal answer

The generation gap between him (50s) and the trolls (18-24) created humorous misunderstandings.

02:59

According to the coffee filter funnel analogy, what does the 'filtered coffee' represent?

medium Click to reveal answer

People who watched the clip, subscribed, and started watching all live streams regularly.

04:48

What is the 80/20 rule mentioned in the video?

easy Click to reveal answer

80% of time should be spent studying and analyzing, 20% on creating content.

07:40

How many days should you wait before posting after creating a new account?

easy Click to reveal answer

Start posting on day 4.

09:13

What is the recommended minimum number of clips to prepare for a month of daily posting?

medium Click to reveal answer

At least 30 clips.

10:23

What is the risk of using fake reactions with donations?

medium Click to reveal answer

It may seem forced and lead to being labeled as a forced person.

14:14

💡 Key Takeaways

💡

Generation gap as viral driver

Identifies a specific demographic factor that made clips go viral.

02:59
🔧

Coffee filter funnel analogy

Provides a clear visual model for audience conversion through clips.

03:39
⚖️

80/20 rule for content creation

Emphasizes the importance of research over execution.

07:40
🔧

Shadowban avoidance steps

Practical advice for new accounts to avoid algorithm penalties.

08:47
⚖️

Be hot or cold, never lukewarm

Summarizes the need for strong emotional reactions in clips.

14:27

✂️ Creator Tools: Viral Hooks

AI-generated clip ideas for Shorts based on the transcript

Becoming a Famous Streamer Is Easy?

43s

Challenges common belief with a controversial claim, sparking curiosity and debate.

▶ Play Clip

Clip Format for Viral Success

55s

Reveals a specific, actionable secret to making clips go viral, offering high educational value.

▶ Play Clip

Fernando Gil's Viral Clip Case Study

54s

Real-world success story with a humorous example, making the strategy relatable and engaging.

▶ Play Clip

Avoid Shadowban: Pre-Post Steps

60s

Provides a practical, step-by-step tip to avoid a common problem, highly useful for creators.

▶ Play Clip

Fake Reactions for Viral Clips?

60s

Controversial tactic that sparks strong opinions, perfect for engagement and discussion.

▶ Play Clip

[00:02] seems difficult, while at the same time it's easy to just play games, talk nonsense, and read Twitter all day. But what if I told you that becoming a famous streamer nowadays is actually quite easy? Don't worry, in this video I'm going to

[00:15] teach you all the techniques to grow your live streams for free, without selling courses like this guy here. I'm going to sell courses because if capoeira is forbidden and human bite... well, it's worth remembering that I'm also going to focus more on teaching you the strategy to

[00:29] grow your live stream than on how you should actually conduct your live stream. Okay, let's go. What I'm going to tell you here is nothing new; this method is already widely publicized and taught on the internet as the best way to grow

[00:42] your live streaming channel. The central issue here is the following: the content that teaches the method of cutting live streams on the internet today, whether paid or free, only teaches the basics. Look, you come here, grab this free Chinese tool

[00:55] that will steal your data, take a piece of Dao, cut it... I'm sorry to say, but if you only do that, the chances of your cuts and live streams flopping are extremely high. I'll show you a quick and practical example of this: compare this

[01:09] quick and practical example of this: compare this cut handing the child over to the devil, Baphomet, come here to my house, you

[01:24] attention more and elicited an emotional reaction from you? Without a doubt, it was the second one, correct? My point is this: for your clips to have a better chance of going viral and impacting the viewer to the point of them leaving the platform and even your

[01:39] live stream channel, the clips need to have a pre-defined format. I'll explain this concept later. I'll show and analyze a recent success story that used this clip format to go viral. Most likely, this

[01:52] streamer isn't from the bubble you like to consume content from, but it's worth talking about him to understand why his clips did so well and converted many people into new viewers. Let's look at the

[02:06] case of the YouTuber streamer Fernando Gil. A hug to you, buddy. Alex from Niterói must be fake, huh? Gil, I'm sad today. It's fake again today. You didn't let me be fake again today. You didn't let me be the passive one, and you're hiding

[02:20] our thing today. I bit your left butt, which turned purple. Prove to everyone that I 'm lying and show your butt. Get out of here, my brother. I mean, Fernando Gil already does these live streams of..." Fernando Gil has been analyzing football for at least four years. Obviously, during

[02:34] those years he had already built a solid base of followers, but not as large as what happened from mid-2024 onwards. If we trace a timeline with all this information we have, we can conclude that the

[02:47] exponential growth of Fernando Gil's channel began when the first clips made by his subscribers started to go viral on the internet. Apparently, this story began when some trolls started sending him super chats to joke around with,

[02:59] and he started responding to them in his cocky, Rio de Janeiro-style "uncle" way. The key element that makes these clips go viral so much is precisely the generation gap. Fernando Gil is apparently a middle-aged man in his 50s,

[03:11] and the trolls are around 18 to 24 years old. If we compare the jokes, humorous references that Gil had when he was younger with the references of the trolls today, we see that they are two completely different worlds. As the trolls

[03:26] send super chats, messing with him with jokes and elements that he doesn't understand, he falls for absolutely all of them, gets angry, and has his reactions. Hilariously, I made a funny video to explain how clips helped convert people

[03:39] who didn't know Gil into recurring viewers of his live streams. I'll use the example of a coffee filter. For which coffee? You need a funnel, a filter, and coffee grounds. Imagine that you and the people who don't know Gil are the

[03:53] coffee grounds, and a random clip from his live stream is hot water. Now let's divide this funnel into four parts: we have the top of the funnel, the upper middle of the funnel, the lower middle of the funnel, and the bottom of the funnel. Before adding the water, the grounds are

[04:08] concentrated at the top, but as you add water, the coffee descends until part of it sticks to the filter walls and another part stays at the bottom of the funnel. The coffee itself passes into the cup as a normal liquid formula.

[04:22] At the top of the funnel are the people who don't know Fernando Gil and who were initially impacted by one of his clips. In the upper middle of the funnel are the people who watched the clip from his live stream but didn't pay attention. In the

[04:35] lower middle of the funnel are the people who watched these clips from Gil's live stream but don't seek out his content. The content at the bottom of the funnel consists of people who watched the clip, found it funny, watched one or two of his live streams,

[04:48] but stopped soon after. Finally, the "filtered coffee" represents those who watched the clip, found it funny, subscribed to the channel, and started watching all his live streams, not only for the funny moments but also

[05:02] for his football analyses and predictions. Do you understand how the " carte" method works? The goal is to impact many people at the same time so that, in the end, some of them become recurring followers. It's worth noting

[05:15] that there was a very high conversion rate in Fernando Gil's case for two reasons: with a very large audience here in Brazil, which is football; second, Fernando Gil's fans unintentionally created a media cannon, posting

[05:30] various clips, each on their own channel. Since many people are making clips from various moments of his live streams, we can use the following logic: the more people sharing, the more videos go viral, and as a consequence,

[05:43] we have a huge number of people impacted and induced to discover the guy's channel. Okay, you saw how it works, right? Now, how can you apply this to promote your channel? Your extremely small live stream with two or three

[05:55] viewers, who most likely aren't willing to do the same as followers of Fernando Gil's live stream, is where the insights from my previous videos about how to achieve goals and the like come in. If you

[06:08] want to watch them, click on the card above. I say that to do anything in life, you need to plan to know how and what you need to do to achieve your goals, and then execute that

[06:21] plan. If you've come this far thinking that to make your live streams go viral, you just need to say a dozen things, cut them, and post them on social media, you're partially wrong. First of all, you need to understand what type of live stream you do and what

[06:34] kind of person you want to be. Are you someone who only likes to do game reactions or RG? Are you someone who likes to comment on gossip on Twitter, etc.? comment on gossip on Twitter, etc.? In other words, understand what product

[06:47] you're delivering in the form of a live stream. Second, who are the five most famous people who do something similar or work directly in your content niche? Once you 've mapped these people, you

[06:59] 'll study everything they do. When I say study, I don't mean... It's not just about watching the guys' live streams and that's it. You need to be aware of the type of content they're creating, what games they play, what kind of content

[07:11] they react to, what kind of profile they comment on Twitter, etc. In addition, you should map out who their audience is, what feedback that audience is giving the streamer through comments, donations, and so on.

[07:25] What is the content of their most viral clips? In short, you should that you can more effectively map what your competitors are doing and finally create a report and audience avatar to use as a source of

[07:40] information. Have you heard of the 8020 concept? Well, that's exactly what we 're talking about: 80% of your time should be spent studying and analyzing, and the other 20% is for creating new content based on the studies done. Now,

[07:55] things start to get interesting. Let's start cutting. Remember the content with a pre-defined format I mentioned before? who your audience is and how you can

[08:07] hypothetical situation here to serve as an example. Example for you to start getting your insights and start posting your clips: Let's suppose I, the narrator, want to do a live stream of gameplay and react to things on Twitter. During the

[08:21] research process, I discovered that the guys from CVOS Fera, like Luan Gameplay, Renom Play, and others, are my competitors, and I wanted to reach their audience. After watching snippets of their streams and researching their content

[08:33] online, I can conclude that their audience is mostly teenagers/ young adults who like to watch shooting games, enjoy a certain type of heavier humor, and like to troll their respective streamers. Okay, I have this

[08:47] information, etc., but I'm going to give you a warning before you start clipping and posting: don't create an account and start posting. If you do that, you'll get a Shadowbuan right away, and all

[08:59] your posts will be stuck at zero views. In this case, follow these steps: on day one, when you create your account, register all your basic account information: email, phone number, two-factor authentication. On days 2 and 3,

[09:13] complete your Bill. Follow pages in your niche and interact with their feed. You don't need to become best friends with everyone, just like and comment with emojis on any post you see, etc. And starting on day 4, you can

[09:28] begin posting. It's extremely important that you follow this routine we 've just outlined because by executing these steps, you'll signal to the algorithm that your account is actually controlled by a human and that it's worthwhile for it to start

[09:42] delivering your content to platform users with this information in before. "Wow, I want to become a streamer. My competitors are long gameplay, etc., blah blah blah." I can think of three different scenarios

[09:56] I could act on. In the first, I'm considering that I don't have any money to spend and I have few viewers on my live streams. I could involving heavier humor, like Comedy Night, and I would cut the

[10:11] funniest jokes combined with my reactions to each one and post them regularly on all possible social media platforms in the form of short videos (Hills, TikTok shorts, etc.) to take advantage of the fact that these are the formats that

[10:23] deliver the most content. Ideally, nowadays, you should start by setting aside a minimum of 30 clips from your live streams so you can post consistently every day for a month. This signals to the

[10:36] algorithm that you're contributing content daily to the platform, and as your videos get more views, you'll receive feedback on what types of content have the greatest potential for

[10:48] virality and which generate the most engagement for your page, and so on. To complement this first approach I mentioned above, if you have around R$0 to spare and are willing to spend it, you can

[11:01] do the following: take the social network where you had the best organic results, select the CTE that had the most views on your page, and pay to promote that video. Access the ad center of the respective

[11:14] social network and create a campaign to increase views of the best- performing video on your account, spending R$6 per day for 30 days. Logically, since this video performed best organically, paying

[11:28] the social network to increase its views increases the chances of virality. It is widely disseminated through advertising, which increases considerably because, despite being an advertisement itself, the

[11:40] organic algorithm will continue to map its metrics: retention, likes, shares, etc. And if it detects that the feedback is positive from the audience, it will also continue to show this publication

[11:54] organically to more and more people, thus bringing more potential recurring viewers of content like yours to your page. The second scenario I imagine in terms of content creation would be to get together with some

[12:06] friends and play games focused on co-op mechanics, like Chains Together, Little Company, and the like. Because nothing like a game that requires teamwork to generate insults and extremely cancelable phrases of the best kind. I don't

[12:20] even need to mention the wealth of content that can come from several gameplays in this format. It can yield several viral clips for you. Besides that, perfect recipe for producing cancelable and viral moments for you to

[12:35] clip and post on your networks. Here I repeat everything I said in the first scenario regarding the creation of clips, posting, and an eventual payment for advertising for the video that performed best

[12:48] riskier, and you kind of need to be a psychopath to make fake reactions seem real and create viral moments. If I could fit a pop culture expression into this scenario, it would be "fake it until

[13:02] you make it." In this specific case, you'll but not on advertising, but on donations to your own live stream. Nowadays, besides the traditional Texture Speed with conventional voices—

[13:16] with conventional voices— that voice that goes 999999—we have programs like LivePS that allow you to send a donation and have it read by a famous personality like presidents, actors, etc., using

[13:31] generated voices and artificial intelligence. Just take a look at this: artificial intelligence. Just take a look at this: Jonathan Fernandes sent R$5. "My name is Jonathan Fernandes, I

[13:44] live in Pavuna, Rio de Janeiro. Death to all Jews." Calm down, calm down, calm down. case is log into a different account on the same streaming platform you're using and send several controversial super chats with questionable humor and kind of

[13:59] make a flamboyant reaction to it, like what happened in the cut. The previous example I showed you... Logically, the difference is that in this cut, the reaction was genuine, and in your cut, depending on how good an actor you are, the reaction can look forced. If

[14:14] you do it perfectly, it might lead to good virality and even a pseudo-cancellation. But to be honest, the chances of flopping and being labeled as a forced person are higher than anything else. Anyway,

[14:27] the point is this: for your cuts to have a chance of going viral, their format should always involve some moment from your live stream that happened. of emotional reaction in the audience, such as laughter caused by a

[14:41] troll by a follower, a very absurd statement, or various insults between you and your friends. In short, the point is that popular saying, " Be cold or hot, but never be cold." It makes a lot of sense for you who want to make

[14:56] your live streams go viral through cuts. Despite the flamboyant example I gave should follow when applying your growth strategy. Therefore, study well so that your insights are good enough and you

[15:11] can grow your live streams using this method I just presented to you. you is this: as you can imagine, videos like this are very difficult to produce. I myself am writing this paragraph at 3:50 AM

[15:24] on a Tuesday after spending the entire day researching and writing. Therefore, the only contribution I ask of you is to leave a like and subscribe to the channel, because by doing so you will be helping me to continue

[15:36] making videos like this in the future. A big, big hug and goodbye!

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