Tubular Labs

YouTube Spotlights Female Creators In Saudi Arabia, Where Watch Time Is Booming

In partnership with video analytics firm Tubular Labs, YouTube has shared some fascinating insights into a burgeoning community of female creators in Saudi Arabia.

The companies released yesterday a list of the five most influential channels in the region. According to the Tubular Influencer Score — which takes into account a creator’s reach, engagement, subscribers, and overall channel activity — the five biggest channels over the past 90 days are Njoud Al Shammari (pictured above), Asrar Aref, Amal Elmziryahi, Hessa Al Awad, and Al Juhara Sajer.

Google published Tubular’s findings on its Google Arabia Blog, noting that total YouTube watchtime in Saudi Arabia — which has the highest watch time per capita globally — grew 50% between 2014 and 2015. To this end, last month, YouTube launched Batala, a channel dedicated to helping users discover the best female YouTube stars in the Middle East and North Africa. All five Saudi Arabian creators are featured on the channel.

Subscribe to get the latest creator news

Subscribe

All told, the five aforementioned creators have amassed more than 184 million YouTube views, writes Diana Baddar

, head of YouTube partnerships in the Middle East and North Africa. And their videos are five times more engaging than the average YouTube video, according to Tubular Labs.

Al Shammari is a 21-year old Saudi lifestyle and comedy vlogger with 890,000 subscribers, while Aref’s channel, which is 505,000 subscribers strong, features travel, beauty tips, challenges, and recipe videos. Dubbed DramaQueen7373, she has never shown her face on camera. Elmziryahi is a Moroccan creator based in Saudi Arabia whose channel predominantly features Middle Eastern and Western dessert recipes, Al Awad is a beauty creator who has also never revealed her face, and Sajer’s videos comprise travel vlogs, family challenges, and self-help talks.

“I am not the same person I was five years ago, it changed me personally,” Sajer told Arab News of her online ventures. “I became more outspoken, courageous, and bolder, and more open-minded as I met a many people from different backgrounds. Now, I have bigger ideas.”

For additional findings, check out Google Arabia’s blog post here.

Share
Published by
Geoff Weiss

Recent Posts

Have you heard? Saluting Patriotic Kenny, visiting 30 NBA arenas, and meeting a new shark

Each week, we handpick a selection of stories to give you a snapshot of trends,…

3 days ago

YouTube is starting to test a “Top Fans” distribution option limited to the uppermost 1% of viewers

Platforms like Patreon and OnlyFans let creators distribute paywalled videos that can only be watched…

3 days ago

MrBeast’s build kits are in the (Kids) Club at a Lowe’s location near you

There's a new creator-led line of monthly build kits arriving at a major home goods…

3 days ago

After 10 years and 50 million subscribers, now’s the time for Genevieve’s Playhouse to hit the toy aisle

Growing a YouTube channel to 50 million subscribers is no small feat, but Genevieve's Playhouse…

4 days ago

Spotify is doing creator memberships, and also AI-generated podcasts

The global podcast industry raked in $9.2 billion last year, surging 27% from 2024. That's…

4 days ago

Are male and female social media accounts floating in gendered political bubbles?

On the heels of a study that examined political polarization on social media feeds, a…

4 days ago