How much is he worth?

How much is he worth?

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en.wiktionary.org/wiki/burgh
en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic/bergaz
twitter.com/AnonBabble

3000 an hour he said

at least 5 rubles

why is this antisemite allowed on youtube?

roughly 20 million

Nothing.

Everything.

nothing

everything

he’s jewish ancestry

the companies claiming all his videos make good money off him

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based saladinposter

>Yea Forums - Television & Film

Thirty billion niggers

about tree fiddy

>yfw when you realise youtube counts as 'television' if only you understood what television means

put your janny application in, faggot

Being played on a tv doesn't make it Yea Forums related or else we'd be Yea Forums.

have sex

It literally just means 'viewing from a distance'

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please forgive my retarded cropping

at least increase your scaling, you are going to get eye strain

I am viewing your retarded post from a distance. That doesn't make it television assrat.

my apologies()
go tell it to the dictionary

How do you fuck up this royally?

Shut up! SHUT THE FUCK UP!!!!!!!

multi-monitors + ms paint

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gosh, now it's blurry

(((Kjellberg)))

Probably one of the most nordic names you could have. It comes from a man named Kjell who owned a mountain.
If your last name is "-gard" "-berg" "-sen" or "-son" then you are certified nordic.

Nords are jews.

Factually incorrect.

no

then show me the youtube board

not a mountain, a berg is a town, so really it means 'Kjell from the town'.

No. Berg means "mountain", not town. It's literally the same as the English word "berg".

The english equivalent is burg or borough. Probably share the same root, since towns tended to get built on hills in iron age northern europe, hence hill forts etc. In names though it refers to settlements not mountains. In fact settlements are what necessitates surnames in the first place, you don't need them living in small villages in isolation.

You're still wrong, though. Even if "Kjellberg" referred to a settlement, it's not the settlement part that makes it a "berg". It's the mountain part. Kjellberg would be a settlement or a farm situated on a mountain (et berg).
Also, names usually don't refer to settlements or villages. They most often refer to land owned by families, which may then later on have become settlements, villages or even cities.
But in every sense of the word, "berg" means "mountain".

Except it literally refers to a mountain or hill because we still have the same word in Dutch. Berg=mountain.

no, you are wrong, since the 'berg' part doesn't mean the settlement is named after it's location on a mountain, since even towns not on mountains were called bergs, it became the term used for them. And no, names most definitely do not refer to land owned by a family in most cases, they refer to that family's position in a community whether it was a trade or otherwise. In fact especially in scandinavia 'land ownership' wasn't even a clearly defined idea until the medieval period and enclosure. So as I said, while berg does mean a mountain, it also means a town, and in a name it always refers to a town.

multiple tens of millions. Between 10 and 60 mil

More than enough to create a platform that could actually compete with Youtube's video monopoly but NAH,
he goes and makes a streaming platform for more shekels.
One that was supposed to have less censorship than the rest but oh hey look at that, it's the same bullshit we've seen a million times before.

>since even towns not on mountains were called bergs
You're partly correct. Towns would get the "berg" name if it was settled on a mining industry. Having a mountain is not necessarily a prerequisite for having a mine, although it's common.
>they refer to that family's position in a community whether it was a trade or otherwise
This is an American thing, not a nordic thing. See: Smith, Tanner, Skinner.
> In fact especially in scandinavia 'land ownership' wasn't even a clearly defined idea until the medieval period
Most names and cities we have today come from medieval times, particularly around the 1300s.

g-fuel is good

>pewdiepie is almost 30 years old

Where do you think "iceberg" comes from you dumb pseud.

>towns got the berg name is situated on a mine
no again, towns were built on hills for defensive purposes, so yes berg can mean hill or mountain but it became the term for all towns, even on the flat, though most iron age towns were on hills. By the 1300s when these newer towns were established, they used the term 'berg' to mean a town, not that it was near a mountain or on one, or a mining settlement, because it meant 'town' by then.

>trades in names is an american thing
by extension you mean an 'anglo-saxon' thing, and guess which language group Old english is derived from? nordic/teutonic. Same language pool as you, and if that wasn't enough you settled most the East coast of Britain so many of our names are direct from you. Names like 'Fletcher' or 'Skinner' derive directly from nordic terms. Your names are often indicative of trades.

pretty sure the ZOG government took all his money and are threatening his life after the recent attacks. He looks scared in his latest videos.

based crop

I can find nothing to support what you're claiming. You said earlier (assuming this was you) that "berg" means "burg" or "borough" but this is probably where your have your facts mixed up.

You see, "burg" and "borough" have origins in the proto-Germanic word "burgz"
en.wiktionary.org/wiki/burgh
This word would sometimes simply translate to "stronghold" or "fort". The old norse word for this is "borg". See: Göteborg
Berg, however, comes from the proto-Germanic word "bergaz"
en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic/bergaz
This word is more literal to what we call a large hill, or a "mountain". Modern words for this in both Swedish and Norwegian would be "berg".

>by extension you mean an 'anglo-saxon' thing, and guess which language group Old english is derived from? nordic/teutonic. Same language pool as you, and if that wasn't enough you settled most the East coast of Britain so many of our names are direct from you. Names like 'Fletcher' or 'Skinner' derive directly from nordic terms. Your names are often indicative of trades.
While the words for this might come from nordic terms, my point was that the custom is not nordic.

30-40 million at the very least
Reminder his family is CEO status in some corps

He makes most of his money from merch, ads from his mobile game and sponsorship

What a greedy bastard, grovelling in the feet of leftists predators for a little more cash. No backbone.
Soph is the real zoomer Youtuber.