Twitch’s Biggest Clown Talks About His Wildest Spectacle Yet
“I really don’t even know what’s going to happen, I really don’t,” he said. “I know that we have things planned. I know that there’s specific gags that I want to do, but there’s a lot of baseball to be played, and we’re just going to have to roll with it and see how it goes.” The performers involved are paid and briefed on what’s going on, and there is some amount of rehearsal, but Jerma stressed that above all else, the point of the show is that it’s a real baseball game with both teams playing to win. “I live for moments like that because it’s challenging, right? It means that we got all this together, and it’s time to turn the cameras on, ‘Let’s go,’ and you’ve got to go,” he said. “And there is no ‘Hold on one second.’ No, you’ve got to go and you have a full probably four-plus hours of time that you have to fill here.” Nathan Fielder’s new HBO show The Rehearsal has captivated audiences for blurring the lines between what seems fake and what we want to believe is real. On the surface it’s a reality TV show about helping everyday people prepare for life’s most unpredictable moments. Beneath that, it’s a documentary about making a reality TV show that’s been edited into a dramedy. At both ends are fiction, but the artifice required to travel from one to the other reveals something true, or at the very least compelling to watch. Jerma’s work operates on a very different, and in some cases much more traditional level. At its core it’s standard live improv comedy teetering on the stakes of playing before a mass internet audience. There’s a similar blurring of reality that takes place, however, and it mutates the spectacle into something much more. The tension between what’s rehearsed and what’s unplanned goes both ways. Some of it must be unscripted, so any moment potentially could be. It helps that Jerma has cultivated an online character that often veers between the mundane and the surreal. The result is serpentine fan pages documenting the lore of his “in universe” streaming character alongside the real one. One thing that is clear, though, is just how much work goes into generating each new mega event in the Jerma timeline. In many ways it runs counter to the very thing that makes Twitch streaming such an attractive platform. Like reality TV before it, the costs are incredibly low, and a big personality can generate thousands of hours of content just by sitting in front of a camera and talking. That doesn’t make the work easy, and Kotaku and others have documented the extensive toll the Twitch content mill can take on its stars. It is certainly less risky, however, than spending potentially hundreds of thousands to put on a live show where the weather has the final say. “It’s a lot of money, it’s a lot of work and it’s a lot of time and it can be scary,” Jerma said. He didn’t specify how much money, but it’s likely a lot more than Dollhouse, which received funding from Twitch and Coinbase and was in turn much more than the $US40,000 ($55,528) reportedly spent on his 2019 carnival stream. The bigger budget isn’t a payday either, he said. Instead, it’s the difference between being able to pull off everything the team has dreamed up for a show versus scrapping half of it in the weeks leading up to a performance. “I don’t want — I don’t like to kind of sit here and put myself on some kind of pedestal with, like, ‘Oh, what we do is, oh, my goodness, our stream here is so much better,’ because it’s an inherent amount of risk and it’s a lot of stress.” At the same time, he sees a lot of potential in his antics for a new genre of livestream comedy, and potentially a proof of concept for other Twitch performers to get more resources to experiment with. After all, the streaming wars between mega corporations like Amazon and Disney have proven there’s an endless appetite for new content. Jerma’s shows are one of the clearest bridges between Twitch and the larger world of streaming entertainment. “It’s a terrifying prospect to a lot of people, which I really do wish that, you know, in the future that there was more opportunity for people to tap into some resources, to do some fun things that they want to do and not have to worry about ‘how can I come up with 50 grand to hire a bunch of people?’” he said. “I wish there was more tools and resources for content creators in general. I don’t know where it’s going but I hope that it continues to go in a good direction.”There’s no real way to describe a Jerma stream, in the sense that you never know what's in store when he goes live. From games, science experiments, dollhouse simulations and even finding his replacement, @jerma985 rightfully deserves #TheStreamerAwards League of their Own Award! pic.twitter.com/00mXa0guWG
— The Streamer Awards (@StreamerAwards) March 13, 2022
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