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Young Creator Makes More Money From Facebook Than YouTube and All Other Platforms Combined

Ed Mylett Show · James Dumoulin: From Zero to over 800, 000 followers · June 9, 2026
Young Creator Makes More Money From Facebook Than YouTube and All Other Platforms Combined
Ed Mylett Show
Ed Mylett Show
James Dumoulin: From Zero to over 800, 000 followers
"I make more money off of Facebook than YouTube, than all the platforms combined. People are like, Facebook? Yes, Facebook. Facebook stopped growing in 2020 so they paid creators more than everybody else."
Doonlan revealed that despite Facebook's perceived decline in cultural relevance, it remains his top revenue source by a wide margin. He explained that Facebook aggressively courted top creators with higher payouts after 2020 to reverse stagnant user growth, a strategy most creators overlooked.

About this episode

Ed Mylett interviewed 23-year-old James Doonlan, founder of School of Hard Knocks, a viral media brand with 21 million followers generating 200 million monthly views and operating with 70 employees. Doonlan, who worked at Chick-fil-A and construction jobs in high school, began posting on TikTok in 2019 and rapidly mastered short-form viral content by posting three times daily. He revealed his company now produces $1-1.5 million in monthly revenue with 50-60% profit margins, and disclosed he has interviewed 48 billionaires including Tom Brady, Tom Cruise, Will Smith, and Reid Hoffman. The conversation explored tactical social media strategies including Doonlan's PAC framework (Platform, Algorithm, Culture), the importance of authority hacking, and why he believes credibility kills all bad attitudes. Doonlan shared that he posted 400 times on Instagram before reaching 50 followers, emphasizing the importance of persistence and letting the market dictate content direction. He also revealed surprising insights from billionaire interviews, including the observation that ultra-successful people respond to texts instantly and think in decades rather than days. Mylett pressed Doonlan on whether glorifying wealth distorts success for young audiences, to which Doonlan acknowledged the risk but emphasized the value of exposing people to mindsets of those who overcame adversity. The episode concluded with Doonlan's advice to travel extensively, move to environments that foster growth, and stay small long enough to reinvest profits rather than inflate personal lifestyle.

Key takeaways

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