
Want to command this micro-influencer army? Here’s how: Well, here’s what you may not realize: for every million-dollar celebrity endorsement, there are thousands of micro-influencers willing to deliver a powerful (and more targeted) message about your brand.Īnd - unlike huge influencers with a Costco-long line of brands waiting to work with them - these folks are ready at a moment’s notice. That’s the name of the game these days.īut with most everything shut down, how are you supposed to keep cranking out that sweet, juicy, sales-driving user-generated content? Now they’re taking over your content studio.Ĭontent, content, content. And cover up those shoes with booties, will ya? The National Association of Realtors recommends that any taking place IRL use social-distancing practices (one prospective buyer in the house at a time, please). One New Jersey realtor relies on drive-thru closings where paperwork is passed between car windows.A lawyer in Atlanta does business with masked-and-gloved borrowers in a parking garage, out of the trunk of his Mercedes.Meet me in the parking lotįor those that are still selling, the process has morphed into weird routines that definitely DO NOT sound like black market arms deals: An analysis of real-estate data from around the country found that housing markets in Florida and New Jersey are among the most at risk to see coronavirus fallout. Zillow, the online real-estate company, released data last week showing that new home listings in the first week of April had fallen 27% from the same time a year ago.ĭown the street at Redfin, the number of houses pulled from the market recently doubled. But this year, the coronavirus pandemic made the real-estate market wilt. That’s what the entire world is telling us right now.īut what if you have to, y’know, move? How in the name of corona is someone supposed to find a new place to live? The search for a home sweet home has gone sourĬome springtime, home sales usually flourish. The coronavirus relief package for small businesses explicitly blocks anyone who does “live performances of a prurient sexual nature” from applying for aid.īut making a living off of sites like OnlyFans is a lot of work: Performers spend up to 80 hours a week thinking up content, coordinating with followers, and promoting their pages - all in exchange for $5 to $10 monthly subscriptions.įor anyone who’s house hunting, things have gotten weirdĭon’t move.

With the country sheltering in place, their usual sources of income have dried up, and they don’t have the labor protections offered to other professionals. The leap to livestreaming is a matter of survival. One performer told The New York Times that she has made $18k from Instagram Live during quarantine. Some of these strip clubs have amassed as many as 60k viewers - and, in rare cases, enormous tips for dancers.


Many performers are turning to Instagram’s roving strip clubs, where they enter live feeds and dance for several minutes with their CashApp usernames hovering in the foreground. CamSoda performer signups shot up 37% in March compared to last year, and ManyVids reported a 69% increase.As one escort put it to New York magazine: “ Everyone’s camming now.”
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