Brooke Ashley Hall has 1.3 million followers on sex eroticismInstagram, 14.9 million followers on TikTok, and 232,000 subscribers on YouTube, which might make you think she has a full production team at her disposal, but not quite. Her husband Marco Hall helps produce her work, and her son said he works as part of her "ideation team."
"We've gotta keep Gen A out here," Hall joked at VidCon 2025.
We sat down with the beauty and lifestyle creator at Meta Night Out to chat about everything she needs to get her work done. Spoiler alert: She says the most important item she brings is "the personality." She edits on Final Cut Pro on her computer, and uses Photoshop to edit her photos, but when it comes to hardware, here are the three items she uses most.
Hall and her husband say she shoots everything on her iPhone and a DJI drone.
"Depending on which content, if you're thinking about, like, the aesthetic videos, I use my iPhone, believe it or not. And a drone," Hall said.
"I do use a Sony ZV-1 (camera for content creators and vloggers) for vlogging, but not for more aesthetic videos." She adds that she shot on her iPhone a video of her walking down stairs in a robe — the video garnered 19.6 million views.
As Mashable has previously reported, "TikTok creator Alix Earle first recommended this simple clip-on camera light in a 2022 video, and it's been an Amazon bestseller ever since." Hall is a fan of it, too.
"We've had it forever, but it's the one that clips on the front of your phone," Hall said, adding that she keeps one in her pocket. "It's great that [Alix Earle] made it so popular."
Mashable was live at the Anaheim Convention Center this week, covering VidCon 2025. Check out our coverage of your favorite creators, the latest trends, and how creators are growing their followings, their influence, and making a living online at Mashable.com.
Topics Creators VidCon
Tinder puts a stop to fake height on profilesFacebook will give you more info about why certain posts show up in your News FeedApple officially cancels AirPower wireless charging matThe Humm.ly app uses music to tune out stressful thoughts'Law and Order: SVU' renewed for recordAsteroid Gault is breaking apart as it zooms through the solar systemTinder puts a stop to fake height on profilesHe's with her: How to address Bill Clinton if Hillary winsOnePlus teases electric car, which apparently consists of curves'Fox & Friends' aired a graphic suggesting there are three MexicosJeff Bezos' affair leak may have been Saudi retaliationApple's AirPower is canceled, but at least we have these memesApple's AirPower didn’t seem that cool anywayOnePlus teases electric car, which apparently consists of curvesMr Potato Head gets fired, replaced by his millennial counterpart Mr Avo Head and ¯\'Law and Order: SVU' renewed for recordA Sega Genesis Mini will hit stores this fallA Valve VR headset will finally be realWe need to stop romanticizing the 'extremely offline' life'Broad City' stars mark show's end with perfectly mushy Instagram posts Why Does Moby Los Angeles Through the Eyes of Eve Babitz Peter Muller Culture Is a Wonderful Fiction: Guy Davenport’s Journals The Continuing Adventures of Helvetica Man, and Other News Why “Tell England”—A 1922 Best Our Winter Issue Is Here! Lish, Beckett, Lydia Davis, & More In the Studio with Aidan Koch A Sentence I Wrote Went Viral, and I Have No Idea Why On Being Between Books Gary Romain, the Greatest Literary Impostor Our Favorite Back Issues from the Archive Notes on the Demise of Travel Guidebooks Yeats’s “Second Coming”—Our Most Thoroughly Pillaged Poem Kay Nielsen’s Stunning Illustrations for “East of the Sun...” John O’Hara’s “Pal Joey” at 75: Still an Exemplary Novella Steve Gianakos: Chubby Boys and Chubby Girls A Brief History of Christmas Trees as Political Lightning Rods The Crystal Cities and Floating Continents of Paul Scheerbart Not “Purple Rain,” But “Blue Rain With a Little Red in It”
2.5592s , 10171.9296875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【sex eroticism】,New Knowledge Information Network