@Pushpaso.ThiwariKumari Channel Audit: 25.4K Subs, 11K Videos Analysis
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@Pushpaso.ThiwariKumari is a Hindi-language Indian creator with 25,400 subscribers and an unusually high 11,000 uploaded videos, totaling 15.27 million lifetime views. That math works out to roughly 1,388 views per video and only 2.3 subscribers gained per upload — a volume-heavy pattern with low per-video conversion.
Channel data · captured Jun 20, 2026
- Handle
- @Pushpaso.ThiwariKumari
- Subscribers
- 25,400
- Videos
- 11,000
- Country
- India
🙏🙏🙏🙏दोस्तों मैं Pushpa so Tiwari Kumari गरीब घर की बहु बेटी हु मेरा सपना हे YouTube per reels banana और short video बनाती हु आप को पसंद आए तो like comment share Jarur karna and channel ko subscribe Jarur kar lena भाई बहन सपोट करना please!!
Let me start with the number that jumps out. 11,000 videos to 25,400 subscribers. That's a sub-per-video ratio of about 2.3, which is one of the lowest you'll see on a channel that's still active. For context, healthy growth channels usually land somewhere between 50 and 500 subs per video over their lifetime. The pattern here suggests posting volume has been the primary strategy for a long time, and the algorithm has been rewarding it just enough to keep the lights on — 15.27 million total views is real reach — but not enough to compound into a much larger subscriber base.
The channel description (in Hindi) reads like a personal introduction from Pushpa Tiwari Kumari, saying she's from a poor family, her dream is YouTube, and she makes reels and short videos. Honestly, that framing matters here because it tells you the creator identity is built around personal connection rather than a niche topic. Indian channels in this lane — daily vlog, household, family content from creators in tier-2 and tier-3 cities — can scale fast when one video catches, but they tend to plateau exactly where this channel is sitting if there isn't a clear content hook beyond "my life."
Here's the thing that's worth flagging, though. The description says "short video," but the last 30 uploads in our scrape are all classified as long-form — zero Shorts. Either the data is misclassifying them, or the channel has shifted off Shorts to longer formats, which on a Hindi vlog channel usually means 3-10 minute uploads. If it's the latter, that's a strategic shift that could explain the recent view stall. Shorts and long-form get treated differently by the algorithm, and creators who move between them without rebuilding their thumbnail and packaging discipline for the new format tend to bleed reach for a few months.
About that view stall. The recent uploads in our scrape are all showing 0 views with empty titles, which is unusual. A few possibilities: the videos are unlisted or freshly published with metadata not yet propagated, the channel has recently uploaded a batch of videos that genuinely haven't picked up impressions yet, or there's a metadata fetch issue on our end. I can't tell from outside which it is, but if it's the second one — actual zero-view uploads on a 25K channel — that's a signal the algorithm has cooled on the channel and impressions aren't being distributed. With 11,000 videos in the library, you'd expect even passive subscriber notification traffic to push every new upload past at least a few hundred views on day one.
The lifetime math tells a more interesting story than the recent snapshot. 15.27 million views across 11,000 videos means most uploads are sitting under 1,000 lifetime views, but the aggregate is real. Channels with this shape usually have a small number of breakout videos (anywhere from 100K to 1M views each) pulling the average up, while the long tail of daily uploads acts as filler. Without YouTube Studio access I can't pull the top 10, but the math forces this distribution. Worth checking from inside Studio: which 20 videos contributed the bulk of those 15 million views, and what did they have in common — title pattern, thumbnail style, topic. That's the asset to rebuild around.
One forward-looking thought. The biggest gap I can see from outside is content focus. 11,000 uploads in a personal vlog lane means the search and suggested traffic is fragmented across thousands of one-off topics rather than concentrated around a repeatable format. The single highest-ROI move for a channel at this scale would be picking the one format that historically outperformed (probably a specific type of household or daily routine video, based on the niche) and running 30 uploads in a row of just that format. The current strategy of high volume across scattered topics has clearly hit a ceiling around 25K. Concentration usually breaks that ceiling, not more volume.
Last thing worth saying: don't read this as a knock on the channel. 25,400 subs and 15 million views is a real audience that most creators never reach. The analysis above is about what would move it from here to 100K, not about what's broken. Volume got the channel to this point, but the next jump usually comes from a different lever.
Common questions
How many subscribers does @Pushpaso.ThiwariKumari have?
@Pushpaso.ThiwariKumari has 25,400 subscribers as of June 2026, based on live channel data. The channel sits in the mid-tier range for Hindi-language Indian creators in the personal vlog and lifestyle space. What makes the subscriber count notable is the context: it took roughly 11,000 uploaded videos to reach this number, which is an unusually heavy upload-to-subscriber ratio of about 2.3 subs gained per video. Most channels at this subscriber level have between 100 and 1,000 videos, not 11,000.
What niche is @Pushpaso.ThiwariKumari's channel in?
Based on the channel description, @Pushpaso.ThiwariKumari operates in the Hindi-language personal vlog and lifestyle niche, with the creator describing herself as Pushpa Tiwari Kumari from a rural Indian background, focused on reels and short videos. This positions the channel alongside thousands of similar Indian creator channels built around personal identity rather than a specific topic category. The country is set to India and content is in Hindi, which means the addressable audience is the Hindi-speaking YouTube user base across India and the diaspora.
How often does @Pushpaso.ThiwariKumari upload videos?
With 11,000 total videos on the channel, the historical upload cadence has been extremely high — likely multiple uploads per day over a multi-year period. To put that in scale, even at 5 uploads per day every single day, it would take roughly 6 years to reach 11,000 videos. The last 30 uploads scraped are all long-form rather than Shorts, which is a shift away from the channel description's stated focus on "short videos." Whether the current cadence is still daily isn't clear from outside data.
Why are @Pushpaso.ThiwariKumari's recent uploads showing 0 views?
Honestly, I can't tell for certain from outside the channel. The scrape shows the last 10 uploads with 0 views and empty titles, which usually means one of three things: the videos are very freshly published and metadata hasn't propagated, there's a data fetch issue on our end, or the channel has genuinely lost algorithmic distribution on new uploads. For a channel with 25K subs and 11K historical videos, true zero-view uploads would be a strong signal of algorithmic cool-down — worth checking inside YouTube Studio against the impressions chart.
What can creators learn from @Pushpaso.ThiwariKumari's growth pattern?
The clearest lesson is the ceiling that high-volume, scattered-topic uploading creates. 15.27 million lifetime views across 11,000 videos works out to about 1,388 views per video — real reach, but spread so thin that compounding into subscribers stalled around 25K. Channels that break past this ceiling usually do it by narrowing focus: picking one format that historically worked and running 20-30 uploads of that same format in a row. Volume gets you started; concentration is what unlocks the next tier.
Is @Pushpaso.ThiwariKumari's channel monetized?
I can't confirm monetization status from outside the channel — that requires checking YouTube Studio or a third-party audit tool with deeper API access. However, the channel comfortably exceeds the YouTube Partner Program eligibility thresholds: 25,400 subscribers is well past the 1,000-subscriber minimum, and 15.27 million lifetime views suggests watch hours are nowhere close to being a blocker. Assuming the channel hasn't received community guideline strikes, it's structurally eligible for AdSense monetization. Whether that's actually been enabled is something only the channel owner can confirm.
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