Hi I'm Mike.
  It was Winston Churchill who said You have  enemies?
  Good.
  That means you've stood up for something,  sometime in your life.
  Are the topics covered on our channel too  controversial for the main stream?
  Do people not want to put a face to their  food?
  Today, we get take a look at those questions,  and the future of livestock ranching channels
  like ours on our Wyoming life.
  If   you are a follower of Our Wyoming Life, then
  you probably know what I am going to talk  about this week, our issues with youtube and
  how that effects what we do and how we are  going to do it from here on out, and if you
  are new, thanks for joining us, I would hope  that you are going to subscribe but let me
  warn you, this isn't going to be the normal  type of episode for us here.
  On any given week you can find us working  our tails off.
  Doing our best to keep ahead of the workload  that seems to just flow from everywhere here
  on the ranch.
  Ranching and farming can sometimes seem like  a never-ending battle.
  Whether it's against weather, equipment,  animals, and sometimes even yourself.
  I can admit it, that sometimes I am my own  worst enemy.
  I get into my own head sometimes, psych myself  out and this week has been one of those weeks.
  I guess that's why I decided that this would  be a good time to just sit down with you.
  Talk about the week, explain the problems  we have had and get it over with.
  Put it to bed.
  Move on.
  So lets talk about the gorilla in the room.
  On July 10th we posted a video to YouTube  called Putting the bulls in with the cows.
  For two weeks that video was up on youtube  and it gain good traction and garnered a lot
  of views from folks just like you.
  In two weeks that video had 330,000 some odd  views.
  To be blunt, a lot of of those views probably  didn't come from people just like you.
  A lot of them came from people who saw the  thumbnail of a bull on a cow and came to watch
  that act and that act alone.
  Which is a little weird.
  As with all of our videos we put it out as  an attempt to educate people on the farm and
  ranch life.
  To show people where their food came from  and hopefully some where along the line, one,
  two or 50 videos in they start to think about  that.
  On July 25th, somebody reported the video  as inappropriate.
  I don't know if they found the fact that  we showed a bull up on a cow, mating as offensive
  or if they just thought the whole video was  rude and vulgar.
  I don't know.
  And I don't really care.
  The video was reported to youtube, youtube  said whoa! and the views on it basically stopped.
  For this next part to make sense, I have to  clue you into how YouTube works when it come
  to promoting videos.
  As videos gain views and become popular, Youtube  then starts suggesting them to more people.
  Just like if you watch this video to the end,  there will be suggested videos for you.
  It may lead you to another farm or ranch video,  and that video can be from any channel.
  As the bull video gained popularity, youtube  started suggesting it to more and more people
  and as long as those people were clicking  on the video, youtube was happy.
  Ads were playing, youtube was making money  off the video and so were we.
  Once the video was reported, like I said,  all things stopped.
  Erin actually came to me and told me that  for some reason the bull video had went from
  over 2000 views per hour to only 20, in minutes.
  We didn't know what was going on, it was  only later that day when we found out it was
  reported as inappropriate.
  You might think that we were upset over the  fact that we no longer had those views creating
  income for the channel.
  But if you think that, then you don't know  us well at all.
  That's ok, I hope you take the time to get  to know us but if you don't, that's fine
  too.
  Ya see, the money we make off of youtube isn't  much, and in fact that video had only made
  us.
  In fact ill show you.
  Out of those 332,259 views off that episode.
  We made $184.55 that's it.
  So if its not the money that made us upset  that youtube , the very next day deemed our
  video unsuitable for most advertisers than  what was it.
  Well I'll tell you.
  That video had momentum, it was reaching a  ton of people.
  I'll give into the fact that a lot of those  views were from people that just came to watch
  something that maybe considered shocking or  weird or whatever but a few of those people
  that were watching the video were getting  our message.
  They were joining our community and becoming,  just like you people that care about agriculture.
  About 2% of new viewers to our channel were  subscribing and joining the herd.
  That may not seem like much but we gained  almost 3000 subscribers from that one video
  in those two weeks.
  With youtubes decision, that was done.
  They were no longer suggesting the video to  new people and although the video is still
  there to watch, that's all it is, its just  there.
  We aren't alone in this boat.
  We did a little research, and countless channels  have dealt with this issue, and a lot of them
  farm and ranch channels dealing with livestock.
  There are a lot of bull breeding videos online  and you will be hard pressed to find one of
  them that is monetized for the creator.
  This is a problem we are going to deal with.
  Even though our videos are presented in an  educational manner.
  We didn't just throw up 3 minutes of bulls  doing it to shock and gain views the easy
  way - its going to be an issue.
  When it comes time to sell calves, is that  going to be found inappropriate, we don't
  know.
  Youtube is a business and its there to make  money.
  If they feel that advertisers wont want to  put their ad on a certain type of video, they
  are not going to let that video make money.
  Worse yet, they aren't going to promote  that video.
  We were told from youtube that monetization  status has no effect on how a video is promoted
  or suggested.
  That is obviously false.
  The moment our video was found to of inappropriate  content, suggestions stopped and the good
  things it was doing were stopped as well.
  So that's where we sit with that.
  Is there anything we can do about it?
  Nope.
  Not a thing, there is no appeal process but  I can say that I am happy for what that video
  did in the two weeks it was allowed to live  a free life.
  That video brought people to us that may never  have found our channel, people we never would
  have met or had the chance to talk to and  people that we hope we help by spreading the
  message of how important where our food comes  from is.
  Because it is important.
  But you already know that.
  By the way, we aren't even attempting to  monetize this video.
  There is no point.
  The footage we have shown you would have gotten  it dinged in a few weeks anyway for one reason
  or another.
  I want to thank every one for the support  they have show us to this point over this
  issue.
  We've gotten emails and comments asking  us if this is going to change the way we do
  anything and the answer is no.
  As the world becomes more sensitive to things  and easily offended, I imagine it is going
  to harder and harder for channels such as  ours that show the real world of raising livestock
  to it fairly.
  Over the next five years, experts have told  me that channels like ours may not even be
  eligible to be monetized because of the sensitive  nature of advertisers and people in general.
  I get it, I worked in radio and advertising  for many years.
  Advertisers play to their customers and if  you advertise on something your customers
  don't like then they aren't going to buy  from you, its that simple but who gets to
  decide what is offensive and what is just  nature.
  That's a hard call but I can tell you that  policies like that are limiting the reach
  of channels like ours, through suggested videos  and organic promotion.
  Youtube isn't going to help us, we are too  controversial, which is something I never
  ever thought I would say about our channel  in a million years but just by the pure nature
  of our lives we are.
  When it comes down to it, its up to us to  spread our own message.
  And when I say us, I don't mean me and Erin.
  I mean all of us.
  If you are still here, you care.
  Share our videos, heck make your own.
  If you share a post or a video and one person  you share it to shares it, it doesn't take
  long to reach thousands.
  I'm not saying you have to share everything  but share what you care about.
  What you care about is important to others,  even if they don't know it yet.
  The question of the week has been, whats going  to happen to our Wyoming life.
  The answer.
  We are going to live it.
  And we are going to share it with you.
  No matter what anybody says, bulls are still  going to mate with cows all over the world
  and eventually the product will end up feeding  millions, if you don't want to see it, then
  you have a choice, turn off the channel.
  But we will still be here and we really do  hope you will be too.
  Coming up this week we start with a brand  new breath of fresh air.
  The project list is coming up on Tuesday with  a major breakdown in haying that will slow
  down the entire process but hopefully wont  put us our of commission.
  Erin and I will be livestreaming on Wednesday  night this week, Thursday is our normal night
  but its Graces birthday, she turns the big  5, so we will be changing the livestream date
  for that and we have a brand new feature coming  up in our livestream that I really hope you
  are just going to love, I'm really excited  for it.
  We really hope to see you there.
  Until then, remember to forgive you enemies,  mostly because it annoys the hell out of them.
  Have a great week and thanks for joining us  in our Wyoming life.
     
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