How I went from working on cruise ships to taking more than 20 a year as a guest — and make a living doing it - Creak News

real time news...

How I went from working on cruise ships to taking more than 20 a year as a guest — and make a living doing it

Share This
J. Alexander selfie on a cruise ship deck with pool in background
J. Alexander runs The Shiplife YouTube channel where he has more than 195,000 subscribers.
  • J. Alexander of "The Shiplife" was working on cruise ships when he started his YouTube account.
  • Now he takes around 20 cruises a year and works on his channel full-time.
  • "My work is literally vacationing," he says, adding that "the hardest part is finding a balance."

This is an as-told-to essay based on a conversation with J. Alexander, a former cruise ship crew member-turned-YouTuber who runs the channel The Shiplife, which has more than 195,000 subscribers. The essay has been edited for length and clarity.

I never expected any of this to happen. Originally I'm from the south side of Chicago, and I didn't go to college. I had always wanted to travel as a kid, but my parents never had the money to do it. But back in high school, I became a professional break dancer.

I ended up working for Harlem Globetrotters for six years, first as a dancer and eventually as an international tour manager. That's when I got a taste of traveling and knew it was what I wanted to do.

I realized working for a giant corporate company just wasn't for me, so I left. After that, I was an Uber driver and just trying to make it in the entertainment industry. A guy that I knew who worked for Norwegian Cruise Line told me they just happened to be looking for an African American hip hop dancer.

Next thing I know, I'm in a room with a bunch of Broadway types, performing on a cruise ship. Podcasting was rising at the time, so one day, I took my iPhone 6 in my room, sat it on some books, and started talking about what the first day is like working on cruise ships.

From cruise crew member to cruise YouTuber

I figured I'd get maybe 100 views on YouTube. I woke up the next morning and had almost 30,000 views. So I just kept going with it. I did a tour of my room, the crew bar, larger cabins, and officer cabins. I broke down how much money you can make. And the channel just kept growing and growing.

At first, I was still doing Uber in between cruise contracts, but was making some nice side money with Google AdSense on my YouTube videos. In 2020, when the pandemic was starting, I heard rumors from cruise ships that there were hundreds of people on board with COVID-19 and that they were talking about sending everybody home.

The next thing I know, my channel kind of blew up.

In 2021, when the cruise ship industry was coming back, I started jumping on every ship that I could as a guest. I was spending most of my money paying for cruises to make content. Eventually, I got a sponsor, which pays for about half of my cruises in exchange for a shout-out. I no longer work for any cruise companies and was able to go full-time with my YouTube channel in 2022.

I took 22 cruises last year. This year will probably be about 30.

Vacationing for a living

I jump on every new cruise ship that comes out from a major line, and then in between that I'll throw in a cheaper or interesting cruise line, like a German or British line.

J. Alexander selfie posing in front of a Virgin cruise ship and pointing at it.
J. Alexander was working in entertainment when he started posting videos about what it was like to work on a cruise ship.

If I'm on a ship I've already been on, I'm a lot more relaxed. But if I go on a brand new cruise ship it can be stressful, because I do very in-depth reviews and videos. I try to do as much research as I can before, and when I get on board I have to go by every single element of the ship. But I'm passionate about it and I'm interested in it, so I don't really consider it a lot of work.

I make great money now living what I call a "millionaire lifestyle." I'm not making millionaire money — it's a lot of money, more than I would've ever thought I'd see with any job — but I have time. I can go anywhere I want, whenever I want, and I have the time and availability to do so, which is absolutely insane to me.

For me, my work is literally vacationing. I'm having drinks, I'm eating food, I'm meeting people. I try to interview at least a hundred people on every cruise. The hardest part is finding a balance. I have no problem hanging out, getting some drinks, but I have to know when to leave and do work.

I've never gotten a free cruise from a cruise line, so I can be objective with my videos. I talk about the good, the bad, the ugly, no matter what. I'm not afraid to go on a cruise ship and say, "The entertainment isn't that great." But being a crew member first put me in a very realistic state of mind when I'm on the ship.

I always encourage people to travel and take cruises

Now when I go on ships, a lot of people know me from my videos. If it's a crew member, they tell me it is because of my videos they even thought about applying. If it's a passenger, they tell me it's because of watching my content that they finally decided to book the cruise.

It warms my heart. Because outside of cruising, I just love traveling. I think travel's the greatest teacher and that the world will be a better place if everybody travels. Now I've been to 78 countries. I'm traveling to all these places and seeing all these amazing things. It's changed my whole perspective on how I see things.

I always tell people, "Look, join a cruise." It's a nice, safe, non-hassle way of travel. You can taste-test a couple different places and if you like it, fly back over there and actually get to know the area that you spent three hours at.

Read the original article on Business Insider


from Business Insider https://ift.tt/vKH8rcT

No comments:

Post a Comment

Pages