Twitch, Amouranth and Indiefoxx ban for ASRM won't stop the adpocalypse, for the community
Twitch
The Twitch community fears that the bans from top streamers like Amouranth and Indiefoxx will not stop the platform's so-called adpocalypse, which is something similar to what happened a few years ago on YouTube.The problem, according to many, is that these are late and ineffective measures, as well as hypocritical, because they do not in any case affect current trends and will not be able to stop the downward slope taken by Twitch after acceptance and the normalization of streams from hot tubs, the so-called Hot Tub meta.
Making the community's fears clear was streamer ShannonZKiller, who explained how ASMR streams hurt everyone, because they can lead to to an exodus of brands from Twitch, annoyed by being associated with people licking microphones while wearing provocative clothes or hopping on inflatable sausages shaped like a sausage while half naked in a jacuzzi.
The result, according to ShannonZKiller, will be a mass withdrawal of advertising from Twitch precisely because of these controversial genres, which will lead to a massive decrease in revenues for streamers.
Streamer Ali 'SypherPK' Hassan has also arrived to support the woman's opinions, who revealed how some companies have already changed their advertising strategies on Twitch due to these goals.
SypherPK: "It's not a good sign that there are currently hesitant companies on the Twitch side of the matter. We think adpocalypse 2.0 is coming, but on Twitch."
You've noticed errors ?
Amouranth subtly labels her fans “Offensively Creepy and Coomery people” after her Twitch ban
Earlier today, Kaitlyn “Amouranth” Siragusa went on a Twitter rant about her Twitch audience, a day after being banned from the platform.
Amouranth, was banned on Twitch along with fellow “sexually-suggestive” streamer Janelle “Indiefoxx” Dagres after hosting multiple suggestive ASMR streams in the past few weeks. The prominent female content creators are two of the many who, in recent weeks, have shifted to the ASMR category after “hot-tub” streams fizzled out in popularity on the platform.
After the suspensions, a former s*x worker posted a lengthy thread on Twitter explaining how the “platform has created an unsafe environment by allowing sexual content.” User @Susu_jpg concluded by saying that “sexual content” belongs on adult sites, something both Amouranth and Daphne “39Daphne” seemed to disagree with.
39Daphne responded to the thread by saying that the fault lies with the people who “chat-hop to be creepy in streams.' Amouranth agreed with Daphne’s lengthy thread, and effectively called a majority of her viewers “offensively creepy and coomery.” “Coomery” does not appear to be a real word.
The initial Twitter thread by @Susu_jpg blamed Twitch for allowing “sexual content” to exist on the platform. She said that allowing sexual content attracts a particular demographic which leads to sexual harassment/sexism for female creators in question. In response, 39Daphne claimed that it is only a handful of people who behave in such a manner, and most creators “do not care” about them.
Daphne posted a lengthy Twitter thread, and said that she has not been “negatively affected” by an increase in audience members who attempt to harass her, or make sexist comments. She also claimed that while Twitch has a problem with moderation, the fault only lies with the “creeps who chat-hop to other streams.”
Amouranth agreed with Daphne, and added to her arguments. The streamer claimed to have talked to a “non-sexual female streamer” who also registered an increase in the “number of creeps” that she came across on Twitch since the hot-tub meta. Amouranth called “offensively creepy and coomery” people a “grenade,” but claimed most “sexy streamers” dive in on the grenade.
In a nutshell, Amouranth said that most female content creators posting suggestive material do not mind their audience to be “offensively creepy.” Of course, this in part explains her own Twitch streams since the hot-tub meta blew up. Amouranth has received a large number of viewers for her “sexually-suggestive” streams and suggested that this was possible because she was actively trying to attract “offensively creepy” viewers.