The Hollywood frenzy is not far from a major crash.


I'm not cursing him, it's the law of nature.
When a creator starts obsessing over outputting values, but their values are high-and-mighty elite narratives,
the ending is already doomed.
What level is Tim at?
His technical skills are undeniable, equipment is top-notch domestically, and the team is professional.
But the problem is, he thinks he represents what is right.
Ghana video, white-left copywriting.
Aggressively promoting a blogger who pushes loans worth millions.
The matchmaking corner incident, making videos claiming we are not at fault.
Every issue is drifting away from the masses.
What is the most deadly?
They truly believe they have no problems.
They are genuinely sincere and dedicated.
Unaware that they are gradually drifting away from the masses.
Drifting away from the masses, but still pushing values.
Constantly proving I am right.
This is a sign of an impending crash.
I've seen too many cases like this.
Once you gain some fame, you start teaching people how to behave.
Once you have some followers, you start pushing your opinions.
Once you achieve some success, you look down on ordinary people.
And in the end?
Your persona collapses, followers leave, and your commercial value disappears.
Ma Dong once said,
Misunderstanding is the fate of the speaker; we can only try to minimize misunderstandings.
What is Tim doing?
It's all just stupid marketing accounts misinterpreting us.
I am very sincere.
My tone is polite.
Politeness masks a condescending attitude.
Sincerity covers up fishing for attention.
Why does this lead to a crash?
Because the audience is not stupid.
Using abstract resumes to fish at the matchmaking corner—what's behind that mindset?
Thinking those people are interesting, thinking you can make a good video.
Promoting loan bloggers—what's the logic behind that?
Is it because the money is in place, or do you really think that stuff is reliable?
The audience can sense it.
The biggest trap for creators isn't poor content.
It's thinking you're already good enough.
Starting to preach, starting to educate the audience, starting to prove you're right.
Forgetting how you got started.
How did the Hollywood frenzy start?
Relying on technology, solid content, real and practical material.
Not on pushing values.
Here are three survival tips for content creators.
First, don't touch on values.
It's exhausting and unrewarding.
You think you're right, but the audience thinks you're pretentious.
Second, don't look down on your audience.
They may not have your money or equipment,
but they are the ones paying your bills.
Offending sponsors is the stupidest thing you can do.
Third, when controversy arises, admit defeat rather than harden your stance.
It's not about having no bottom line, but about not proving you're right.
The audience cares about attitude, not debate.
You may win the argument but lose people's hearts.
Many ask, can I still share opinions?
Yes.
But the premise is, don't think you represent what is right.
You can say, "This is how I think."
Don't say, "Everyone should think like this."
There's a big difference.
Finally, to be honest,
whether the Hollywood frenzy can be slowed down depends on how Tim chooses.
Continuing to prove you're right—crash is inevitable.
Admit the problem, return to content, and there's hope.
The biggest enemy of creators isn't competitors.
It's that inflated ego of yours.
Don't be pretentious, don't teach others, don't fake it.
Doing good content is more important than anything.
Take it slow, be steady, don't rush.
Living is more important than anything.
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