Eve Bennett was probably the least liked out of all of them because she can come off a bit caustic at times, but Eve Cornwell was actually doing pretty well Youtube-wise post-undergrad and even after she quit law. I think what made her channel unpopular was leaning too far into stereotypes and tropes. For example, I have absolutely no issue with Eve Cornwell being queer, but for a while there she made it her entire personality which was a turn-off because her content didn't used to be about her wearing pants and making it out to be some kind of badge of honor. Most women wear pants regardless of their sexual orientation. It's not the 1900s. If she had talked about actual problems in the queer community I wouldn't have even batted an eye, but linking her outfit choices to her sexuality was very shallow and really only hurts the LGBTQ community because people already think they can make assumptions about strangers' sexualities based on their attire.They fizzle out because their content and following was about studying and going through GCSEs, A Levels, University etc. They've all reached the end of that now so their relevance to that market is gone. Eve Bennett bless her was clearly the most intelligent and genuine of the lot of them and she had the ability to recognise that and move on. I genuinely like her and am really pleased for her that she seems to have started on a proper career which is not what you can say for the rest of these study tube losers like Jade, Ruby Granger, Eve Cornwell etc.
Furthermore, I was supportive of Eve Cornwell's initial change in career, but as someone actually in stem it was getting annoying hearing her describe herself as a women in stem when she didn't even understand the software her team was working on. It's somewhat common to have non stem managers for stem jobs, especially in tech because a lot of software engineers, for example, enjoy their current jobs and would not want to manage a team of people instead of actually programming, but it doesn't make it any less exasperating to see it first hand.