Saturday 16 March 2019

New video by TheRichest on YouTube

10 Honest Reasons Why PewDiePie Might Not Beat T-Series
PewDiePie vs T-Series have been at war for many months in what fans have called “The Great Subscriber War.” The battle began in 2018 when the Bollywood YouTube channel suddenly began gaining subscribers at an unprecedented rate. In less than a year, T-Series jumped from 30 million YouTube subscribers to 80 million. So, who will win the war? Interested? Check out other amazing videos about our world and subscribe to the channel! ► http://bit.ly/Subscribe-to-Richest ◄ Like: 11 Shocking Facts About Albert Einstein They Don't Teach You In School https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1F-VyeRWSvU This Guy Is Selling The Moon And Making Millions Out Of It https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OIYT_FSeJX8 This was a shock to everyone, most notably PewDiePie, whom T-Series threatened to usurp as the most-subscribed channel on YouTube. PewDiePie held the title for five years, and out of nowhere an unheard of channel at his heels (metaphorically, feet not confirmed yet) It was at this time that PewDiePie’s Bro Army organized a massive guerilla campaign to drive traffic to their leader. They’ve been successful, staving off T-Series again and again, even after the Bollywood channel briefly surpassed PewDiePie in subscribers. The Bro Army has always been one step ahead of T-Series. But, we have to wonder, how long can this last? Without exception, every projection has T-Series beating PewDiePie. It’s not a matter of if, but when. Pewd’s fans aren’t hearing any of this, however. And why should they? They have been successful thus far. But we have to be realistic, and so should they if they want to keep T-Series at bay. In knowing all the advantages that T-Series has, the Bro Army can make the proper strategic modifications to ensure that this battle will never be lost. The advantages that T-Series possesses, which we will describe in this video, include a bigger and more diverse subscriber base, a more ethical campaign, a technological revolution in India that is widening internet access, and thus YouTube viewing, more prevalent, and a budding India-Pakistan war that is indirectly nationalizing T-Series. This stuff may be hard to hear, but it doesn’t make it any less important. It hurt us just as much to make this video as it will hurt you to watch it.


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