The Shorts feed is the cheapest audience-building machine YouTube has ever shipped: every video gets shown to strangers, and the algorithm decides from their behavior whether to show it to more. The catch is statistical. Any single Short is a lottery ticket, channels grow by buying lots of tickets, which means posting daily, for months.
That cadence is what breaks people. A 45-second Short edited by hand costs two or three hours once you count scripting, sourcing visuals, recording, captioning. Do that daily and Shorts becomes a second job before it pays like one.
Blipix collapses that cost to minutes. You choose the niche and topic, the AI handles script, visuals, voice, captions, and the final cut, and the built-in scheduler can publish to your channel automatically. Your daily involvement shrinks to the two decisions that actually matter: what to make a Short about, and whether yesterday's numbers suggest a better angle.