Charlie D’Amlio is the first ticket ok creator to hit 100 million followers. It’s also the first by some distance – just two other creators breaking 50 million. On the ticket ok, which makes him twice as big as Will Smith, three times as big as The Rock, four times as big as Selena Gomez, and five times as big as Kylie Jenner and Ariana Grande.
It also means it has reached 100 million subscribers in record time. On YouTube, it took 14 years for any channel to hit 100 million. D’Amlio only started posting on ticket ok in May 2019, and the app is only available from the current Gust 2018 (at least under its current branding).
It’s a huge milestone for both her and the app, but it also comes at a time when Charlie – and his family – are increasingly trying to move forward with ticket ok stories. Recent months have seen the launch of podcasts, further expansion on YouTube, book deal announcements and more.
Once they find success on one platform, producers often branch out into other social networks and more traditional media formats. It should allow them to expand their reach, talk to fans in more places and transform into a platform that harms their ability to prosper. The creators of YouTube, for example, are seeing changes in algorithms coming and going that prioritize certain types of video and consider it later.
That, too, has to do with their ability to make money. Ticket ok that the makers have started offering payments, but the creators are disappointed with the return. The creators also don’t have the ability to sell peppers directly from the app. This means that there are two main ways that ticketing stars can earn money by recording original ads, or by giving the app opportunities elsewhere.
The D’Amilio crew has been quick to wrap up the media ecosystem around not just Charlie, but the entire family. Dixie, Charlie’s sister, released a debut single in June that quickly jumped. BillboardChart of artists filling E (To date, the music video for the song has more than 92 million plays on YouTube alone). The sisters have started podcasts together, and both are experimenting with traditional YouTube formats (“My Slim Review,” “I went surfing with Casey Nystat,” “I tried this snack for the first time”) to create followers there. Good. Charlie is also working on a book that will be released next month.
Heidi and Mark, their parents, have also started building an audience. They each have their own ticket ok, Instagram and Twitter accounts and are clearly displayed on the “D’Amilio Family” accounts on the same platforms. The biggest sign of his success as a family is that, when the trailer made a deal for Charlie to start posting on his platform, he brought the whole family with him.
This time last year, Charlie’s ticket had about 6 million followers on ok. In the years since then, both she and Ticket OK have seen an increase in weather – but Ticket OK has also faced a barrage of political concerns, which has put her future in question. It looks like the ticket ok will eventually pass it – but if the platform starts to flip, Charlie and his family have already found plenty of other places to be safe.