I have a smart phone not because I want it but because having one actively saves me time and money. The ability to access the internet on the go means that if I have to go somewhere I have never been after work I don't have to go home to map it.
Apps for stores I shop at give me the difference on a digital gift card if what I buy there is cheaper elsewhere. The thing is a useful tool. I have the internet at home because for applying for work and staying in touch with people it's helpful. At this point having the internet is as important a utility as having a phone is. I am lucky in that I live with my folks who can afford TV or I wouldn't have that.
I am poor like I consider people who can afford even one iPhone rich kind of poor.
I get that not everyone is at my level of poverty and they shouldn't have to try to live like me simply because I do. That being said I don't get this gratuitiously shoving money in my face when I watch YouTube.
I was watching a video about important historical moments. One of the pictures was of Steve Jobs announcing the iPhone 1. Cool that's important. The person though then felt the need to show off that they had bought and kept every single iPhone since the first one.
Even did a frowny face because he had to give one of them away.
If this had been a video about collections, his iPhone collections or really anything where "look at what I can do" would have been directly relevant I wouldn't have minded.
Most people on YouTube don't tell me "look at all of the stuff we can afford" Most people on YouTube seem to be aware that their audience is going to be everyone from low income people like me who appreciate the massive amounts of free entertainment to people who can buy them three times over.
But occasionally there seem to be YouTubers who forget that they are fortunate to be able to afford what they can and inadvertently rub it in others faces.
Should people be more self aware of their good fortune?
Apps for stores I shop at give me the difference on a digital gift card if what I buy there is cheaper elsewhere. The thing is a useful tool. I have the internet at home because for applying for work and staying in touch with people it's helpful. At this point having the internet is as important a utility as having a phone is. I am lucky in that I live with my folks who can afford TV or I wouldn't have that.
I am poor like I consider people who can afford even one iPhone rich kind of poor.
I get that not everyone is at my level of poverty and they shouldn't have to try to live like me simply because I do. That being said I don't get this gratuitiously shoving money in my face when I watch YouTube.
I was watching a video about important historical moments. One of the pictures was of Steve Jobs announcing the iPhone 1. Cool that's important. The person though then felt the need to show off that they had bought and kept every single iPhone since the first one.
Even did a frowny face because he had to give one of them away.
If this had been a video about collections, his iPhone collections or really anything where "look at what I can do" would have been directly relevant I wouldn't have minded.
Most people on YouTube don't tell me "look at all of the stuff we can afford" Most people on YouTube seem to be aware that their audience is going to be everyone from low income people like me who appreciate the massive amounts of free entertainment to people who can buy them three times over.
But occasionally there seem to be YouTubers who forget that they are fortunate to be able to afford what they can and inadvertently rub it in others faces.
Should people be more self aware of their good fortune?
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