Potatoherder
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Jun 28, 2020
I'll add that another major factor is Nick not actually doing what rumble wanted: a viewer siphon. He did everything in his power to make people not want to use rumble or be in the rumble chat. Whether it was him treating rumble rants as afterthoughts or outright saying he hated the chat and that he only liked to use locals.My guess is that it was 40% about his declining numbers and lackadaisical streaming schedule, 60% about Rumble's desire to get rid of larger contracts, and approximately 0% about content, because decision makers are unlikely to actually sit through one of Nick's shows and there wasn't a big scandal to grab their attention before the cokestream.
He isn't wrong that it was and currently isn't great but he is paid to make people get on rumble. They want people to watch content and comment in chat and on videos. The core problem Rumble has is it feels like no one is on the platform aside from when it crashes from a Trump rally.

