Thot streaming or not?

in thot •  6 years ago  (edited)

Girls and Twitch.tv.. thats a thing.

A lot of women use their body so get a lot of money from horny followers and / or subscribers. A recent trend or is it just a phase?

Bildschirmfoto 2018-05-23 um 18.53.12.png

Recently famous streamer PewDiePie called out to all the ladies, using their bodies and to do sometimes questionable things on stream or in videos. He basically called them THOTS. He also fired at ALINITY being a Twitch THOT.

Wait stop. What is a THOT? For those who not know:

What guys call girls in schools that send out nudes and porn of themselves. An acronym for That Ho Over There.

can we copystriking* him?

So since that incidence I spend some time on Twitch, looking up Twitch-Streamer who are using their body to make money. In my opinion this throws a lot of bad light on the womens-stream-community. Of course I respect that they can do that if they got the body for it.

So I came across Amouranth . I stopped by because I saw that stream on my Pulse and clicked in. At that exact moment she was talking about that she had problems with other female streamers (but not anymore). When I carried on I came back to her stream, finding her dancing half naked.

Bildschirmfoto 2018-05-23 um 18.49.11.png
(This picture is not from yesterday)

But I searched for more and found for instance Pink_Sparkles doin.. guess what? Dancing too.
Bildschirmfoto 2018-05-23 um 19.12.30.png
(From a vid, to see it you need to follow her).

So.. I'm not judging here. I'm just not a fan of it. Thats no call out or anything.
It just opens the question if PewDiePie was right about saying "Twitch THOTS". What is your opinion on that?

Btw, here is RaquelLily learning to play guitar:
Bildschirmfoto 2018-05-23 um 19.10.01.png

You can actually find both on Twitch (Youtube probably too). The ones who using their bodies and (I just call it that way) the more serious streamers.

*Copyright-Striking:

If you get a copyright strike, that means your video has been taken down from YouTube because a copyright owner >sent us a complete and valid legal request asking us to do so. When a copyright owner formally notifies us that you >don’t have their permission to post their content on the site, we take down your upload to comply with copyright >law.

Keep in mind that videos can be removed from the site for different reasons, not all of which are copyright-related. >Also, Content ID claims don't result in a strike.
Read full Youtube article about Copyright-Striking

funsource.png

Authors get paid when people like you upvote their post.
If you enjoyed what you read here, create your account today and start earning FREE STEEM!