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Published Jul 13, 2026 Transcribed Jul 14, 2026 C Creator Insider
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✂️ Creator Tools: Viral Hooks

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I got rich from Disney Confessions

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The shocking reveal of a huge payday from a viral video hooks viewers with curiosity about money and secrets.

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I spent $25k on a video that flopped

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The raw honesty about a massive failure and the lesson learned resonates with anyone who has faced setbacks.

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My voice is their conscience

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The emotional story of a fan quoting his advice creates a powerful, relatable moment that inspires and connects.

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Storytimes beat trends forever

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Michelle Phan's timeless advice challenges the trend-chasing mindset and gives viewers a lasting content strategy insight.

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Who are you and what is your channel about? >> Smoothie and I talk about lifestyle, but mostly it's just animated story time. >> Was there a moment where you knew you could make YouTube your career? >> When I dropped Confessions of a Disney Employee, that check was like, oh, wow, I can buy electronics from anywhere with this money. So, yeah, that that was Confessions of a Disney Employee one. >> Sometimes there's a video that we know

is going to bang, but we're not into it as much versus like a passion project that we're not sure it's going to get views. How do you balance that? >> how real do y'all want to get on this? >> Really real. >> I spent $25,000 on a video that I thought was going to slap and it flopped. But, also, these bad things happen and you learn from them. Think about how strong you get when bad things

happen and you overcome them and you rise from them. Everything is data and knowledge. So, I took that knowledge and now I'm trying, you know, just learn from it and build from it. >> A lot of people are watching YouTube on television right now. Do you think about that when you're making your videos? >> I have a routine now. When I started in 2005, 2006, it was like, okay, they're watching on their laptops and their desktops.

And then it was like, oh, shoot, now they're on their phone. And that was like, all my friends, everybody I know had the routine like, when we're during the day, phone. At night, always TV. >> Yeah, yeah. We have a lot of families, a lot of kids watching YouTube. What do you hope they get out of your channel? >> I'm always trying to be the big brother that I never had. A guy came up to me

yesterday and I'm glad this happened because in my brain I'm like, I don't know if this is hitting. The advice I give my friends, they ignore it all the time. So, I always wonder it's like, is this landing with anybody? And the guy came up to me, he was like, Smoothie, the video you made about your friends watch Did he say your name? The video you made about saying, do not race? >> Yeah. >> Anytime anybody

pulled up to me at the light, they're like, it's do not race. I hear that in my head from your videos. Like, your conscience My conscience is your voice. So, when I hear people say that, bro, that's that's the fuel that keeps me going now. >> What's the best advice another creator's ever given you about YouTube? >> Ooh, I would say Michelle Phan. When I first started out, uh, she said story times. She was like, Smoothie,

no matter what you're doing, it's great to follow trends, but story times will be around forever. If you have a good story, I mean, they were telling stories back back back in the day. They were drawing stuff on the walls telling stories. So, keep in that lane and you'll be set. She was like, "We're cutting hot knife through whatever or is this really cake or is this really real?" That's going to be done in about 2

years, but your story times will last forever. That was the best advice I ever got.

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