All Killer No Filler

Conan O'Brien used to have an hour-long show. Over time, he realised that he was just creating content to fill time, just using interviews with people he wasn't really interested in to make the show an hour long, rather than filling it with stuff that people wanted to watch and he was interested in. So what did he do? Cut the show into 30 minutes of course. These constraints mean him and his team had to work harder to fill the time with content, but it also meant that they shed the filler.

Watching YouTube videos, where the length of the video can have an impact on how well it performs, and how much money it generates, you can tell that some people are putting a bit of filler into it. The truly good YouTubers understand that it's the content that is important, not the filler. Once again, doing it for the money can have the exact opposite effect.

This is something I think I'm guilty of with this blog sometimes. A lot of my thoughts are unedited and they just appear on the page. That's fine by me because I'm not aiming for a Nobel prize in literature, this blog is simply to get my thoughts out. In saying that though, if something does seem superfluous, I cut it. More often than not I've deleted paragraphs and paragraphs just to start fresh because I felt the message wasn't succinct, or even valuable.

So, get your ideas out all you can, but make sure you refine them and cut out the filler. The world will thank you for it.

ENJOYED THIS? HAVE MORE.

MOUNTAINS OF WISDOM

Subscribe to my yamabushi newsletter

RECENT BLOG POSTS

New students and new places
Tim Bunting AKA Kiwi Yamabushi on Zao-san
Mind Games
Writing

YAMABUSHI BLOG POSTS

Options on and off the table
Recession proof
woman wearing teal dress sitting on chair talking to man
More About Them

RANDOM POSTS

black and red typewriter on white table
Consumption versus Production
Quality over quantity
young athletes preparing for running in training hall
The Real Work
Tim Bunting Kiwi Yamabushi

Tim Bunting Kiwi Yamabushi

Get In Touch

Sakata City, Yamagata, Japan 

tim@timbunting.com

Share this:

Like this:

Like Loading...
Scroll to Top