
BigWayne📈💜🦅
282 posts

BigWayne📈💜🦅
@Wayne__00
Helping small creators grow 🚀 YouTube automation tips Join our WhatsApp group 👇









i found the perfect cost-efficient strategy for AI animated videos people think that animating AI videos is too expensive while also saying that basic carrusel imgs are crappy despite CHEAPER but i came across this channel a couple days ago and got STUNNED by its ingenuity👇🏼 instead of animating the whole video, animate just the first 1-2min and then use only images the first 60-90 seconds do the heavy part: > people see motion in the feed > it INSTALY feels higher quality > they click > they get hooked > after that, you don’t need to animate everything > those viewers who didn’t engage with the topic are already GONE that alone can cut production costs by 3-4x and it gets even BETTER now that image-to-video is way cheaper the vid you see below was automatically generated on CalliopeLabs: > $2.2 for images + voice + captions etc > $2.5 for animation better QUALITY, faster renders (30s), lower cost feels like we’re entering a new phase for AI faceless channels, follow me in this process :)




"At YouTube, my colleagues and I believe a responsible AI future depends on giving people control over their likeness," Leslie Miller writes. "That’s why YouTube worked with Congress on the No Fakes Act." wapo.st/3PyvPCB


Hey @YouTube @TeamYouTube! Why is this guy saying he will call 911 if people gift him not terminated yet? The stream title isn't even relevant to the streams.









nothing beats hitting ‘publish’ on a video you’ve been editing for weeks 😮💨




Hi @TeamYouTube Yesterday, my channel Polemod had its monetization removed for "inauthentic, mass-produced, or repetitive content." This is really confusing to me because every video we make is hand-built in Unreal Engine and takes 2 to 4 days to finish.




Day 141 — Fall Asleep Educational Documentary | Evergreen Niche Today I want to share what I'm actively doing to protect this channel from getting flagged for Inauthentic Content — lessons learned the hard way from being hit before. Nobody knows the exact reasons with complete certainty, but after studying a lot of channels, there are clear patterns you can follow to lower your risk significantly. Here's what I'm implementing right now: 1. Title Variety : Avoiding repetitive formats like "Fall Asleep to XYZ" or "The Entire History of XYZ" across every single video. Mixing up the structure keeps things different . 2. Distinct Thumbnails : Making sure no two thumbnails share the same layout, text placement, or visual alignment. 3. Controlled Upload Volume : Sticking to 3–4 uploads per week — especially important in the fall asleep niche where videos run around 3 hours. Flooding the channel too fast is a red flag - learnt from the last hit. 4. Rotating Content Structure : Switching up script structures, video lengths, intro styles, and CTAs regularly. Consistency in quality, not in templates. 5. High-Effort Editing : I make sure the first 3–5 minutes have video content, and that each chapter has visually distinct image sets — no lazy transitions or repeated visuals between sections. 6. Channel Trailer : Having a real, human-recorded trailer that explains your channel's goal and how the content is made goes a long way. It immediately separates you from faceless template channels and adds a layer of authenticity during AI scans. 7. Breaking the Pattern : Every 4–5 uploads, throw in something different — a human-recorded FAQ, a behind-the-scenes editing video, or a simple "what topic should I cover next?" video. It signals the algorithm and there's a real person behind the channel, not just an automated content machine. This is all based on what's working right now. As AI detection evolves, the rules of the game will likely shift — and I may get hit again at some point in future. That's fine. The move is always the same: learn, adapt, and keep building.















