AmateurTV

How to broadcast on AmateurTV with SplitCam

AmateurTV is the leading Spanish-speaking cam network — strong audience in Spain, Mexico, Argentina and across LatAm. The default Model Panel broadcaster works in-browser, but it also exposes a standard external encoder path that free SplitCam connects to — letting you stream with multi-camera scenes, beauty filters and overlays to a hispanophone audience that doesn't get well served on US-centric networks.

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Quick answer
Broadcast on AmateurTV with SplitCam: install SplitCam, build your scene, in the Model Panel open Broadcast Settings → External Encoder, copy the server URL and stream key, paste into SplitCam, Go Live.

Step-by-step

1
Download and install SplitCam

SplitCam is free live-streaming software for Windows and macOS — no signup, no card, no watermark. It's the encoder that sends your video to AmateurTV.

2
Build your scene

Open SplitCam and add your webcam. Layer in overlays, text, a second camera or your phone, beauty filters or an AI background. Use Spanish text on overlays for AmateurTV's hispanophone audience.

3
Get your AmateurTV URL and stream key

Log in to your AmateurTV model account, open the Model Panel, navigate to Broadcast Settings → External Encoder. The page reveals a server URL and unique stream key. Copy both.

4
Connect SplitCam to AmateurTV

In SplitCam open Stream Settings, paste the AmateurTV server URL and stream key into the custom RTMP fields. Set bitrate to 3,500–6,000 Kbps at 1920×1080, 30 fps, with a 2-second keyframe. Run the built-in speed test first.

5
Click Go Live

Press Go Live in SplitCam, then go online from the Model Panel on AmateurTV. Within ~10 seconds your stream reaches the network. Subsequent broadcasts are one click — open SplitCam, Go Live.

Pro tips

Hispanophone audience first

AmateurTV's traffic is overwhelmingly Spanish-speaking — Spain by daytime, LatAm in evening US hours. Stream titles, scene text and overlays in Spanish dramatically out-perform English-only on this network.

LatAm timezone is your prime

Peak traffic correlates with LatAm evening hours (UTC-3 to UTC-6). If you're flexible, broadcasting late-evening CET / early-morning Asian hours hits both Spain and LatAm peaks.

Solid mid-tier payouts

Not the highest RPM in the industry, but stable — AmateurTV pays consistently and the hispanophone niche has less competition than top US networks.

Use a wired connection

Ethernet beats Wi-Fi for a long live show — a dropped frame is a dropped tip. Run a cable to the streaming PC.

Troubleshooting

Your AmateurTV stream lags or buffers

Almost always the bitrate is higher than your upload can sustain. Run SplitCam's built-in speed test, then set the bitrate to about 75% of your measured upload — 3,500–6,000 Kbps for 1080p, lower for 720p. The lag clears once the encoder stops outrunning your connection.

Dropped frames during the AmateurTV broadcast

Dropped frames mean packets aren't reaching AmateurTV in time — usually unstable Wi-Fi. Switch to a wired Ethernet connection, close bandwidth-heavy apps, and lower the bitrate a notch. One spike is fine; a steady climb means the connection can't keep up.

Black screen — viewers see no video on AmateurTV

Your camera isn't selected as the active source in SplitCam, or another app is holding it. Close Zoom, Skype or OBS, pick your webcam again in SplitCam's source list, and confirm the preview shows your feed before you press Go Live.

AmateurTV rejects the stream key or won't connect

Re-copy the stream key — a trailing space or an old, rotated key is the usual cause. Confirm the server URL matches the one AmateurTV shows and that external-encoder broadcasting is enabled on your account. A green slider in SplitCam's Stream Settings confirms a valid key.

No audio or audio is out of sync on AmateurTV

Pick SplitCam as both the camera and the microphone, and select your real mic inside SplitCam's audio source. If audio drifts behind the video, lower the resolution one step — the encoder is overloaded and the audio is waiting on late frames.

FAQ

Does AmateurTV officially support external encoders like SplitCam?

Yes — the Model Panel includes an External Encoder option under Broadcast Settings. AmateurTV provides a standard RTMP server URL and stream key; OBS, SplitCam, vMix and other RTMP encoders all connect.

Where do I get my AmateurTV stream key?

Model Panel → Broadcast Settings → External Encoder. Both the server URL and stream key appear there. Copy both into SplitCam's custom RTMP fields. The key is account-bound.

What bitrate should I use for AmateurTV?

Standard cam-quality settings — push 1920×1080 at 30 fps, 3,500–6,000 Kbps with a 2-second keyframe interval. Run SplitCam's built-in speed test first.

Is SplitCam free to use with AmateurTV?

Yes — SplitCam is free, no watermark and no time limit. AmateurTV's external encoder option is free to enable.

How much can models earn on AmateurTV?

Earnings on AmateurTV depend on audience size, hours streamed and tipping behaviour. Active broadcasters typically take home $200–$3,000 per month; top performers reach $10,000+. Your revenue share follows AmateurTV's commission structure — check the model agreement before going live.

Is AmateurTV safe for broadcasters?

AmateurTV requires age and ID verification before payout, which protects models from fraud. Use a stage name, never share personal data on camera, enable geo-blocks to hide your stream from your home region, and treat every viewer request as transactional. SplitCam's overlays and AI background can also hide or replace your real surroundings.

What documents do I need to become a model on AmateurTV?

AmateurTV typically requires a government-issued photo ID (passport, driver's license or ID card), a selfie holding the ID, and a tax/payout form (W-9 for US, W-8BEN for non-US). Approval usually takes 24–72 hours; once approved you can go live the same day.

Can I stream on AmateurTV from my phone?

AmateurTV usually offers a mobile broadcaster app or a mobile-web broadcaster, but the experience is limited — no overlays, no second camera, no AI background. For full production quality, broadcast from a computer with SplitCam and use your phone as a second camera (SplitCam accepts IP-camera input from phones).

Does AmateurTV support OBS or an external encoder?

Yes — AmateurTV provides an RTMP server URL and a stream key in the broadcaster panel. Paste both into SplitCam's Stream Settings → Custom RTMP, set 1920×1080 at 30 fps with a 4,000–5,000 Kbps bitrate, and click Go Live. The Custom RTMP route gives you full SplitCam scene composition (multi-camera, overlays, filters).

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