Does anyone know where natalie tran lives
This is a conservative estimate and covers just the Google ads alongside each clip - the figure could be higher if one includes money earned from paid endorsements and product placement. The comedic value is in Tran's satirical re-enactments of the situations she is talking about and the fact that she plays all of the characters.
Tran did not respond to a request for comment today but in an interview with this website last year she said: "I think that to have longevity on these kind of websites you need to offer something different She said the skits were all based on things that happened in her day, "just a little bit exaggerated for comedy purposes". The immense popularity of YouTube has created celebrities out of ordinary people around the world. It offers seemingly limitless exposure for people to market their personal brands.
Many have turned their virtual celebrity into real-world dollars, such as Where the hell is Matt? Please try again later. The Sydney Morning Herald. By Asher Moses Updated August 20, — 3. Credit: Nic Walker. Her first 10 apologies, in order of appearance, relate to: nothing apparent; not having many "milestones" in her life; other diners sitting too close to us at the restaurant; having to move to a different table; mildly criticising her former high school; not playing sport; being unable to remember activities she might have taken part in at school; the name of her YouTube channel "communitychannel" ; something to do with curry; nothing apparent.
Tran's parents were refugees from Vietnam, who came to Australia in Her mother, who had been a lawyer, worked for Australia Post "in the sorting area".
Her father, a literacy lecturer in Vietnam, became a public school teacher. She moved to Meriden Anglican School for Girls and, "They signed me up to this weird class at lunchtime," she says.
Then you have to say something about yourself: who you are, where you're from. That's a weird thing to go through when you change schools, when you're hormonal and you're a horrible teenager. She did "not very great" in class. It's a really hard job. I don't think it should be a degree that people look at as a segue, and a lot of kids do. If you go into Education, you look around and feel, 'I really hope none of you teach any of my children in the future.
And I really think, if your degree stops within five years of you graduating, you should get your money back. And the way my parents understood that was, if you had a degree, you would be able to get a job. So I got a really useless degree, and got stuck in traffic trying to pick up my boyfriend on my way to my graduation, so I missed my graduation, and we just went to my sister's house and had cake.
She made her first videos because her partner was away and she had a lot of time to herself. Her audience was largely confined to her friends, until one of her movies featured on the front page of YouTube, and she saw a big increase in her traffic when the site redirected to her homepage.
That's amazing. She's non-committal about this and her other internet rankings. That same year, she was offered a regular spot on Network Ten's news show, The Project. She worked as a reporter on The Whip segment, talking about what was going on around Sydney. She met producer Rowan Jones while filming a piece about the Easter Show, and they have been a couple ever since.
I'm, like, 'Does it get cheaper after five o'clock? And then I go, 'Don't worry about it, let's go. The internet has not made her rich. Jones is a freelancer, he and Tran work as a team, and the majority of their income comes from filming events and weddings, making corporate videos and promotional clips for real-estate agents. Tran and I have been talking for a while when our photographer arrives at the restaurant, leading to a slew of new apologies, beginning with a generic "sorry" when he introduces himself, and ending with an expression of remorse for not having ironed her shirt for the picture.
I visit the bathroom, but leave my recorder running on the table. While I'm away, Tran says "sorry", twice, to some anonymous individual. When I return, she apologises, twice. I don't know why. This year, I decided to finally become a vegetarian, and I haven't eaten here as a vegetarian. I could have vegie yaki-udon.
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