Ads will still run from advertisers that have opted into this content. Some content is not suitable for all advertisers and we provide controls for advertisers to opt out of showing on sensitive content, including videos that some viewers may find graphic. Even if they do not meet those guidelines, they are still technically eligible to have ads on their videos, though perhaps in a limited capacity.Ī spokesperson told The Post, “These videos were never demonetized and are currently eligible to run ads. In a statement to The Post, YouTube clarified that once a channel becomes monetized they’ll be examined against their advertiser-friendly content guidelines. You can then use the sharp tip of the tweezers to engage the blackhead and pull it out the rest of the way, says Dr D’Anna. Line up the tines so that they are open and facing up, engage either side of the blackhead and gently squeeze so that the blackhead is removed.
Sandra Lee received a Critics’ Choice Real TV Award for female star of the year in 2019. This is when the blackhead will be softened and less resistant to removal.
Lee first started getting “strikes” on her YouTube channel in 2016. This includes “footage or imagery showing bodily fluids, such as blood or vomit, with the intent to shock or disgust viewers,” which may fit the description for some of Lee’s content. YouTube policy states that any content creators who post “graphic or violent content” risk having their videos removed and, in extreme cases, their account revoked. Her channel now boasts more than 7 million subscribers and 2 billion views, but Lee says she struggles to make decent money on YouTube because the site insists her content is “too graphic” - an assessment she called “subjective” to Business Insider.Ī YouTuber’s value is based on their view count, according to Influencer Marketing Hub’s estimates, who said that for every 1,000 views Lee gets on her videos, she should earn between $3 and $5 - which means she would have earned between $6 and $10 million from her 2 billion views in total.
Sandra Lee, the dermatologist behind the pimple-popping franchise, got her start on YouTube back in 2010, before scoring her own show on TLC and further expanding her following on TikTok. Pimple Popper’s YouTube videos aren’t popping off with advertising income. YouTube star uncorks 60-yard pass in NFL training camp ‘laser show’ĭespite millions of subscribers, Dr.
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