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When a YouTube channel reaches a specific milestone and is deemed eligible for a YouTube Creator Reward, [1] they are awarded a relatively flat trophy in a metal casing with a YouTube play button symbol. The trophies are of different sizes: each button and plaque gets progressively bigger with the channel's subscriber count. [4]
"THE RUBY PLAYBUTTON / YouTube 50 Mil Sub Reward Unbox" 18 December 2016 PewDiePie unboxes a customized Ruby Play Button award sent to him by YouTube in commemoration of his channel reaching 50 million subscribers. [‡ 8] [14] "Can this video get 1 million dislikes?" 24 December 2016 PewDiePie asks his viewers to dislike the video. [‡ 78 ...
A hunter who does not wish to shoot a bear grabs outside of the video's viewport to reach for a Tipp-Ex tape roller, and uses it to cover the word "shoots" in the video titled "A hunter shoots a bear". Users were able to enter words in the gap, which lead to different unlisted videos with a multitude of pre-recorded reactions. [105]
This page was last edited on 1 February 2025, at 06:27 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
A like button, like option, or recommend button is a feature in communication software such as social networking services, Internet forums, news websites and blogs where the user can express that they like, enjoy or support certain content. [1]
Dream uses a separate Minecraft account to play as DreamXD, the god of the Dream SMP and who has canon access to creative mode. [ 9 ] [ 6 ] The Disc Saga, the server's longest-running story arc, was a series of events centered around two rare music discs belonging to TommyInnit.
English: The Red Diamond Play Button, awarded by YouTube to channels of at least 100,000,000 subscribers. Русский: Красная бриллиантовая кнопка, которой награждают каналы, набравшие как минимум 100 000 000 (сто миллионов) подписчиков.
This reaction format is still widely used in Japanese variety shows, where it is the equivalent of a laugh track on American television shows. [2] One of the first online viral reaction videos showed a child reacting to the "Scary Maze Game" prank on YouTube in 2006. [3] Beginning in 2007, reaction videos began to proliferate on the Internet.