I saw this post and thought I'd share my project. My project takes video clips from Reddit and makes them into high quality video compilations. Here is an example result!I used the Reddit Media Downloader to download the videos.Then I used pushshift.io to get the related information about the Reddit posts. This data was used to add the title to each video clip. Also, this data is used in the descriptions and titles of the videos.I used FFmpeg to concatenate the videos together. Then, I grabbed some royalty free music from Benound.com and added that to the background of the video.So, I set the project to compile 3,000 of these compilation videos. Then, I use YouTube Uploader to upload the videos daily to YouTube.If I could let this project run wild, uploading daily videos, I can only imagine how many subscribers and views it would gain. Then, I could use this traffic. Whether to run YouTube advertisements ($18 per 1000 views), set up sponsorship deals ($500-$10,000 per deal), promote my own web projects or Kickstarter projects, you name it. Whenever I have that feeling of: "ah, I have this great website idea, if only I had a huge Twitter following and I could promote it". I thought this project would be a great way for me to be able to promote my projects in the future. The problem is this: I don't want to steal these videos.But, here's the thing: if you have (legal) videos you'd like to use in a compilation YouTube channel, I would love to set this project up. You can send me the videos (I'm talking thousands of clips). I'll compile them in whatever fashion you want using this script. Then, I can set my bot to upload weekly, daily, or even hourly to your channel. Let the channel grow, and before you know it, you'll have a place to advertise all of your new projects.
Submitted April 02, 2020 at 02:06PM by PureStress
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