August_West
Conscience do cost
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An alum I’ve come to understand this week.Good publicity nonetheless. What’s his connection to UConn?
An alum I’ve come to understand this week.Good publicity nonetheless. What’s his connection to UConn?
Either had I before last week.
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TikTok-famous D’Amelio family to attend UConn men’s basketball game
Charli and Dixie D'Amelio will be in Storrs Wednesday night when they attend the UConn-Seton Hall game with their parents.www.nhregister.com
An interview with Marc D’Amelio, UConn alum and Tik Tok dad – The Daily CampusGood publicity nonetheless. What’s his connection to UConn?
dailycampus.com
Keep asking, she’ll come around again.My daughter came to everything once upon a time , now even begging doesn’t work.
How does that compare w/D1 football payouts figures?His daughters make a combined $27.5M as influencers on TikTok.
Seconding this.That is crazy. I'm part of the old crowd and am no expert on Tik Tok but what exactly do they post on Tik Tok that makes them so popular? The only thing I can think of that would make them so popular is probably not allowed on Tik Tok.![]()
And, she completely let "tick tock" slide.Lol here is the actual text thread between me and my college soph at tip off Wednesday .
I had no idea. Someone said tik tok I snapped a shot and I texted to her. And then got called “ bro”.
She is in process of transferring there for fall semester. There’s still hope!Keep asking, she’ll come around again.
Yup shows what I knewAnd, she completely let "tick tock" slide.
It's what other teenagers and 20 somethings consume instead of TV. Short little videos about all sorts of things. I don't know how else to explain it. Advertisers want to reach the 16-30 year olds, and this is where you can reach them (and YouTube). You can't reach them on broadcast TV. It's a big deal for UConn.Seconding this.
What the hell could teenagers post about on TikTok that would be worthy of 8 figures a year?
Lol here is the actual text thread between me and my college soph at tip off Wednesday .
I had no idea. Someone said tik tok I snapped a shot and I texted to her. And then got called “ bro”.
Who is that guy next to her? Looks like a DT. Travis Jones?View attachment 73586
Charli and Dixie - Bored
Mom - Looking to strike up a conversation with the guy sitting next to her.
Marc- rubbing his hands together in anticipation of the start of the game.
I was actually just about to post about him assuming people would wonder. It's Oneya D'Amelio, completely unrelated to the other D'Amelios I believe. He's also a TikTok star and has 25 million followers for his angry reactions. He was just in the Planet Fitness commercial during the Super Bowl with Lindsay LohanWho is that guy next to her? Looks like a DT. Travis Jones?
(For whomever wants a primer)Seconding this.
What the hell could teenagers post about on TikTok that would be worthy of 8 figures a year?
I just can't even.(For whomever wants a primer)
Originally dance tutorial videos. Dance videos are popular on TikTok as a social meme for young people. Short videos showing a certain dance step set to random song. Tutorials helped other young people do the dances themselves, so they became highly trafficked by people who wanted to be cool (basically everyone in high school at the time). These videos are also pushed by algorithms because well-dressed, fit, young, attractive females get views from essentially every gender and age group (a story as old as time).
At some point, the d'Amelios joined up with some top LA TikTokers and formed a TikTok collective called Hype House. This is what separated them from other popular dance TikTokers (alongside general personality, charisma, fashion sense, etc.). At that point (and really before) they had transitioned into social and family dynamics as a dominant form of content. Essentially celebrity culture. Who were they dating, wearing, seen with, what were they doing, etc. The Hype House was a rented LA mansion where they all independently filmed their videos, but most didn't live there. Think Studio 54 meets Def Jam or something, but with teenage drama. They all raised their own individual fame by capitalizing on the fame of each other. Despite being massively popular for a while, at some point, it became lame to be part of the Hype House, so the d'Amelio's left and continued doing their own thing.
Similar to the Kardashians, their parents were business savvy and capitalized and expanded their reach and exposure in smart ways. Their income comes from posting sponsored videos, but also from actual modeling and ad partnerships (they've been in super bowl commercials, etc.) and now a reality show on Hulu where they have a chance to capitalize on the end of the Kardashians show to be the "it" celebrity family.
Random message board guy gets snarky.I have no idea who this guy is or why his daughters' presence is a worth mentioning...
That was an @krinklecut opportunity to just let many of us know who the frick he and his daughters are.Ok
So much for becoming a teacher or something.His daughters make a combined $27.5M as influencers on TikTok.
Embrace it.Apparently now.
My 18 year old (soon to be 19) daughter calls us 'bruh' whenever we do or say something she doesn't agree with....I think it's funnyEmbrace it.
My 15-soon-to-be-16-year old daughter started calling my wife "girl' recently, and then she tried it out on me.
Once.
But she's been following these girls, and TikTok, for as long as they've been a thing.
If they can interest her in attending UConn, I am a fan for life.
Marc is a fraternity brother of mine who completed his last two years of undergrad in Storrs. He’s a legit fan who had court side Gampel seats prior to things blowing up on Tik Tok. Recently joined a group that bought Mitchell and Ness, along with JayZ, Michael Rubin (Fanatics, 76ers) Maverick Carter and others. That should probably bring more visibility to the program.
I've had Pepe's pizza with Marc Damelio. Fact.Marc is a fraternity brother of mine who completed his last two years of undergrad in Storrs. He’s a legit fan who had court side Gampel seats prior to things blowing up on Tik Tok. Recently joined a group that bought Mitchell and Ness, along with JayZ, Michael Rubin (Fanatics, 76ers) Maverick Carter and others. That should probably bring more visibility to the program.
The guy is going to be one of our biggest donors and widely known public supporters. There isn't any evidence that he just randomly decided to start liking UConn basketball, he just wasn't a public figure before so no one knew who he was. He's good to have on our side.I would love to know what the terms of our contract with them is (sorry but 98% sure we are paying them - This guy didn't rediscover his UConn fandom out of the goodness of his heart and make his daughters come along for the ride - everything is opportunity cost for them).
To be clear I think it's a great strategy as everyone else here has said - but it's very likely a marketing expense. Maybe Marc gave UConn an alumni friends and family discount.
And they can share it, getting an immediate response and more views raising their internet presence. Stuff getting share raises the value of the original content since it increases its views.It’s not hard to understand. Kids used to watch half hour sitcoms. They’d wait until Friday night at 8:30, sit in front of the TV and wait 22 minutes of episode for Urkel to say his tag line.
Kids don’t watch tv or absorb content like that. It’s archaic. Now these influencers put out a video or two a day and like someone mentioned, some even team up in one house together. And they put out content that you’re kids watch every single day more than once. Dance routines, fashion stuff, pranks. No worse than the horrible sitcom scripts we watched.
He didn’t. He’s been a legit fan for a long time. DJd at Huskies, was well known around campus, was our social chairman at Sig Ep. He bleeds blue for sure.The guy is going to be one of our biggest donors and widely known public supporters. There isn't any evidence that he just randomly decided to start liking UConn basketball, he just wasn't a public figure before so no one knew who he was. He's good to have on our side.