(Disclaimer: This transcript is auto-generated and may contain mistakes.) You You You You You You You You You You You You You You You You You You You You At all costs, probably the worst offender of our crucial safety guidelines, a weekly podcast hosted by the most pernicious hate group of them all, The Baptist Bias. You Thanks again for tuning in with us, The Baptist Bias 8pm. You're watching the greatest show ever. Ben, why don't you say hi to everybody? How's it going everyone? It's The Baptist Bias. We're live Tuesday, February 28th, 8pm Central Time. You are right where you should be for another edition of the show. Talking YouTubers. Pastor Shelley is by my side. We've got a great audience. We've got a great guest. I'm ready to go. Well, you know, obviously popular YouTubers would be our most famous steadfast channel and Love Thy Neighbor. Oh, wait. Nuked again. Gone. And it's gone. Obviously, YouTube is such a wonderful platform and we love everything about it. I can't wait for it. Yo, yo, mama. I've been looking for someone to parent me all along the way. And of course, all to protect our democracy. Nothing could be more fragile and more important than our democracy in a constitutional republic. Absolutely. And also ensuring equity for all. Yeah, I mean, we don't need to discriminate against, you know, anybody except for white men that are straight and make money. We don't want to discriminate against anybody, though, except for them. All are welcome. It's wonderful. Well, I'm excited that we have a special guest on the show this evening. He is a popular YouTuber for now. It's Cassidy Campbell. Let's bring him on the show. That's funny. How's it going? Pretty good, man. Thanks for having me. What's up? We're just, we're excited to have another show and talk about YouTubers. And we thought, hey, we should bring on a YouTuber himself. Why don't you introduce yourself to the audience real quick? So my name is Cassidy Campbell. And man, I've been doing pranks and like comedy based stuff on YouTube for I mean, this is going on the seventh year, man. So I've been doing this a while now. And I do some videos like catching child predators and stuff like that as well. So yeah, man. So would you call yourself a YouTuber? Is that like a label that you like or you agree with? If somebody asked me what I do, I'm like, well, I make videos for YouTube, Facebook and Rumble. I don't just say, yeah, man, I'm a YouTuber. I don't know. It sounds weird. Okay. What about, you know, getting into this industry, is this something that was purposeful? Like, did you just wake up one day and decide, you know what, I'm going to just go all in on online videos? Or is it something that's going to happen by accident or organically? What was kind of how this, how did this start? Yeah, man, so I used to watch a lot of pranks on YouTube when I was like, probably just early 20s, I'd say. And I was kind of inspired by these other YouTubers. And I was like, you know what, I'll just give it a shot. It looks fun. So kind of just was doing it for fun and it took off. I mean, I didn't expect it to blow up like it did. And plus, I started in a better time. Like now it is so hard to blow up on YouTube, man. And just the way they've changed their algorithm and just all these new rules they constantly seem to be implementing. Like it used to be for like YouTube was actually for just normal people like me and you. And now it's just for these major corporations and what they do, obviously, is they a lot of these content creators, you can you know that they heat them. It's where basically they push them to the top like somebody like Mr. Beast. Like they're going to push them to the top and they want them to be the face of the platform, not because they're the best, not because they're the funniest. It's simply because they just want somebody to be the face. And that's that. Yeah, they probably made a contract with those individuals, right? Like they probably signed them or they have agreements with them and they're kind of just going to go buy whatever they want them to do. Exactly. You know, it's interesting. Like back when I started discovering YouTube, I don't even know exactly. Maybe 2012 or 2013 is probably when I started watching a lot more YouTube videos or just kind of seeing things online a lot. It seemed like the searching algorithm was really good. You could find a lot of different content. There was a lot of good information on YouTube and just kind of slowly over time, it just kept changing and evolving. It even seemed at that point in time that the algorithms were designed to promote content to you that you liked. I think they would kind of analyze your behavior and say, hey, you like these videos? Here's other videos that are just like it. And really the goal is just to get you to watch. It wasn't necessarily nefarious as much as it was just simply honestly trying to please the user. Is that kind of what your experience was? Oh, 100%. And on top of that, you know what was cool that they used to be able to do? Say you had a video on YouTube and I wanted to respond to it. I could literally make a legitimate response video and it would show up right under yours. Wow. Yeah, that was cool. When did you kind of start? Do you remember what year or when you kind of started making these videos or kind of getting on YouTube? Yeah, so I started doing comedy stuff, pranks and whatever in 2017. Yeah, 2017. Okay, so 2017. And I mean, one of the questions that we kind of had or were thinking about is like how to get popular on YouTube. If we kind of go back to a 2017 mentality for a second, how long did it take for you to get kind of going or kind of like how many subscribers and views? Because it seems like now you have maybe like 1.68 or 1.69 million subs. That's a lot. So like how long did that take or what was kind of your journey? And what's funny is that I got way more views because the algorithm is just so garbage now. I got way more views when I had like 300,000, 400,000 subs. I'm like that's not realistic, dude. It should be the other way around, you know what I mean? It doesn't matter how good the video I put out is. But I was going to say, so it probably took me about a year and a half of consistency with the pranks until I started really just starting to blow up. But I mean, obviously I was never on like a MrBeast type level or any of these other people, you know, like I had pretty good traction. I mean, but it was never like insane. You know, it was like it was kind of it was pretty, pretty steady growth, to be honest, man. So, I mean, I think I looked it up and I think there was like 32,000 YouTubers that have a million subs now. It was something like we should fact check that, but I'm pretty sure. Why don't you fact check that for me, Ben? But I think when I looked it up, there's like several thousand YouTubers. And of course, YouTube's really expanded into all kinds of different genres at this point. 32,000 YouTube channels. Yeah, 32,000. So I think that, you know, initially, though, YouTube was kind of mostly comedy videos. Is that I mean, again, I don't know exactly when. When did YouTube start? 2006, I believe, or 2005. Yeah. Oh, five or six. And when did they sell? Do you know when they sold? Because they sold 2012 to Google for like 300 million, I think. Yeah, it was like a crazy amount of money. I remember, I just want to mention real quickly, I do remember those early days of YouTube back in 2006. Do you? Did you use it back then? It's hard for me to think of that far back. I'm sure that I watched some things, but I thought, I think I watched YouTube and I thought it was stupid because it was just like all these random people just uploading just garbage. I mean, it wasn't even funny. It wasn't, it was just like, this is some guy like watching grass grow and he uploads it onto YouTube. In 2006, I was in high school and I made my own YouTube channel in 2006 as a child and just do it, just talking wrestling. Were you born? With my friends. What? You were born in 2000? Yes, yes, I was. Okay. So, you know, I was a huge wrestling fan as a kid and so we did like a podcast on there. Literally, I was like a 10-year-old. But anyway, it was a lot more accessible back then, Cassidy, and much easier to garner many views. Yeah, way easier because they didn't have this garbage algorithm and all these stupid guidelines. Yeah. Well, it seems like to me, and I don't know what the future beholds, but it seems like YouTube is trying to turn into TV. Oh, yeah. Back in the day, you know, at least when I started listening to Pastor Anderson and Faith Board Baptist Church and I got interested in YouTube just because of the reach potential, and I started kind of thinking about ways that a church could reach people, you know, in my mind, I was never thinking about TV because it just seemed like it's impossible to get on DTV. TV is kind of locked down. You have to have millions and millions of dollars, know somebody, and even then, they're not going to select any kind of content on television. And, you know, YouTube was kind of this free-for-all, Wild Wild West, anybody can do it. But at this point, it's almost seeming like we're getting to a TV era where YouTube is going to be so locked down that the barrier to entry is just enormous. No one can really grow. And of course, I don't think they want to claim that, so they'll allow people to still create accounts and get 50 viewers or something, you know. But in order to find their content, explore their content, share their content, you know, it's just going to be, you have to go direct link to it. It's almost like a direct website at that point. Is that kind of what you think is going to be the future of YouTube or what's your kind of perspective? Oh, yeah, I started noticing that a while ago just when they started implementing all these guidelines that they're trying to make it like TV. And they're obviously, you know, just trying to pump up these major networks, you know, like CNN and MSNBC, whatever, Fox even, just these major networks. And they have their favorite libtard content creators that they'll push in the algorithm who will just push whatever narrative they want. Like, what is it, Dr. Mike and stuff. So, yeah, that's what I think is the future. Yeah, young turks. The guy who says that Christianity is bad, the Bible is bad, but he is supportive of bestiality as long as you're not harming the animal, he said. Chunky yogurt. Yeah. Well, I mean, I think in Spain they recently made it legal for bestiality. He probably took a flight right over there when that happened. Yeah, well, I you know, I don't know what. It would be like it's impossible to know, but to me, it'd be funny is if we could see the young Turks or somebody how they would do without all of the help and all of the algorithm. No one would care. I mean, you know, it's just kind of hard. You can't really see. But in my mind, again, we don't have a free market. So, you know, it's really hard with the platform like a phone and these other devices to create an alternative to YouTube. But if you could create an alternative or there ends up being another opportunity to really push your content like it was before, I feel like YouTube would eventually kill itself. I mean, because nobody cares about all this junk that they're promoting by and large. And they have some content creators that people like, but if they were able to get off of this platform, this crazy train, I think that they would. You know, I don't know if Rumble is the alternative, like a viable alternative. I don't know if Rumble is going to eventually turn into YouTube Lite or if they're going to continue to try and stake more conservative and allow more free speech. But, you know, we're going on on Rumble. What do you what do you think about Rumble? Oh, I've been pushing my stuff over there, especially like the because I can't post the to catch a predator videos on YouTube. So I somehow I can still post them on Facebook, but I put them on Rumble and then I have a local's account. So I post like uncensored stuff there. And and it's good. It's like it's a paywall, basically like Patreon. But they don't have guys like Patreon still has guidelines and they will wipe your crap out. But locals doesn't have any of that. So, yeah, it's like a paywall. But I think Rumble is the future, man, especially you're going to see in the next two to three years a big difference, I think. And Rumble has grown by like 70 to 80 million users in the last year or so. You know, I feel like also Rumble's probably struggling a little bit with just trying to grow their platform, meet all the tech requirements and everything. Yeah, because initially when I started going to Rumble, it seemed like it was hard to search and find content. But it seems like it's gotten a lot better more recently. And I know there's a lot more content creators over there. We we've put our show and we put some of our sermons on there and it's gotten a lot of views. So I think that there's definitely a fan base over there. There's people that want the content. And, you know, you might not be able to find it always on YouTube. In fact, we're trying to build our own platform, godresource.com. And we have a video platform. We're actually streaming The Baptist Bias over there as well. And I think that we're going to end up starting from now on on our YouTube streams. We're going to cut them at the near the end of the show and only go on Rumble, only go on godresource.com so that we can say anything that we want. And to try and help users transition and go to these other platforms, because, you know, at the end of the day, our days, our day specifically are limited on YouTube. And it's not necessarily a source of income for us. So you're the love preacher. How is that possible? Well, obviously, some people don't like love, you know, and we just we just like to love everybody over here, Ben. Right. Don't you just love everyone? Of course. I love everyone. I just want to love people with the truth. And, you know, I love people with Leviticus 2013. And I would love for everyone to watch the most loving documentary of documentaries. And, you know, that is a loving documentary. The it was funny because the Young Turks, they thought they were going to like expose Pastor Anderson and they posted the video like, look, this hateful preacher saying this about the gays. And then it just totally backfired on them because everybody in the comments was like, God bless Pastor Anderson. He's telling it how it is. YouTube comments sections are based. Yeah. You go to the comments section of a lot of these libtard left wing lunatic videos and you see like practically 95 percent disagreeing and calling them out for being insane, calling them out for being deranged. And it's like they're all just anti sodomite and pro truth. There's a very large audience of people out there who are like minded with us, not on everything, but on a lot of things, and especially the sodomite issue. And I think the challenge for us is just trying to reach those people and trying to galvanize them and obviously get them the gospel. But Pastor Shelley, I do think there is a very large audience out there for us to reach, even with all the censorship. Of course there is. I mean, that's the reason why they censor us is because there's millions of people that we watching us. I mean, I think that Pastor Anderson would be one of the most popular YouTube personalities if it weren't for censorship, if it wasn't for the algorithm being unfair. Hundreds of thousands of subscribers, I'm sure. Well, probably millions. I think I think, again, he would be one of the top YouTubers because when I initially was finding him, I would just type in the word Baptist and it would just be like only Pastor Anderson videos. And he was just kind of the top of the results. And of course, you know, a lot of his documentaries, again, we're talking zero censorship. If there was zero censorship, he could put every one of his documentaries up, every one of his videos up. I mean, it's going to skyrocket. Well, we already know what it was like with After the Tribulation. That was a documentary that was put up during an era in which there wasn't very much censorship and it got millions of views. Dozens of millions, you know, I think 14 million just in Spanish. So there you go. Despues de la tribulation. Yeah, it might still even have a big section somewhere. But, you know, I recently got my YouTube nuked and I don't know why because they don't even send emails anymore. They don't give you strikes. They just it's just gone. It just disappears. You know, like the Chinese government disappears people or something. Wasn't my fault. But probably, you know, every time I leave and have guest preachers, all of a sudden my YouTube channel disappears with it. But I I think that Brother Ben said that you'd lost a channel recently. Is that true, Cassidy? Oh, no, no, I never lost the channel. OK, good. I thought I thought you're you texted me that you're Cassidy Campbell backup channel or whatever you put the channel that you put up the Bible. No, it wasn't deleted. Not the channel, the video. Oh, the video. OK, gotcha. Yeah, they took they took the video down because they said that the person was banned from YouTube. Gotcha. I see. So maybe maybe that's the issue. Maybe we just, you know, can't put certain. I mean, is Alex Jones like that, too? If you put Alex Jones on YouTube, is it an automatic ban? If you put a. So if I took a video of him that was on like there was actually his video and it wasn't just like me having them on my podcast or whatever, then it would get deleted. OK, let's give me it. They didn't give me a strike for it, but they just deleted it. Now, let's say let's say a random liberal just has it has a YouTube channel and they're like putting up my content or past. Alex Jones content and they're just like, oh, this is terrible. But they just played it. Would that get nuked? No, probably not. Just like it's funny how when you people would post some of your sermons on Twitter and it wouldn't get nuked at all. It was fine because they would say at the top, like, this is a hate preacher. And but if you were to post it, they would nuke it. Well, someone told me they had this idea. They said we should just get a liberal personality just to put up all of our content and then just be like, oh, that's terrible, isn't it? And just basically see if we can just get it out there and see if it could be popular, like, oh, look at this terrible preaching and just put a bunch of clips or something. But I didn't feel like I could do it myself because it would be like a little obvious. So I think it's like someone else to make a YouTube channel and be like, look at all this terrible preaching or something. I think that would be funny. But I don't think Mr. Beast could just be walking in crying. Yeah, no, this is not true. We need your liberal. Yeah, we need the guy who went to Marty Epstein. Marty Epstein should should maybe make that video for us. He can make his return. Well, I do want to talk about you brought up Mr. Beast and you brought up some of these people. I want to bring up some of these because I think Mr. Beast is the number one YouTube personality. There is YouTube channels bigger than his, but I believe that he's like the number one personality. Oh, yeah. Give us give us some thoughts on Mr. Beast here. To be honest, I don't really watch him like that, but it's from what it seems like, his biggest concern is money, because he was saying that if there was a brain chip that came out, what's it? The neuro link that he would get it because he's like, oh, there's just so much money that you could make from it like. Yeah. Wow. Yeah. Can we can we get Mr. Beast's channel pulled up? See if we can get our production team to just pull up just his channel. I also noticed when I I think I looked at it today and he has on his about section just all all the money he's given away. But he also has a website where you can buy merchandise and he sells his own like chocolate bars like Mr. Beast's bars or something like that. Yeah. And cookies. Oh, in cookies. You're right. But, you know, interestingly enough, I mean, this guy, I think his YouTube channels are just one thing. Just giving stuff away. Yeah. He calls himself a philanthropist. So go to the about section for a second. See if we can click on that. It'll tell you everything he did. Twenty three billion views, buddy. That's a lot of views. I mean, and again, he pretty much just puts it right there. A cop, a cop. This is Mr. Beast's accomplishments. Raised 20 million dollars to plant 20 million trees. Wow. Given millions of charity, donated over 100 cars, gave away a private island, given away over 100 PS fours, gave away one million dollars in one video, counted, counted to one hundred thousand. Did he really do that? He did a video like that. Yeah. Long time ago. Wow. How long did that even take? Dude, I don't know. I have to go back and I would think like, well, here's the thing. Up to up to that point, he didn't have a single accomplishment. I mean, it's just he's just giving away money. I mean, there's no way. It's not like he just his money. I'm sure he has sponsor or. Yeah. I mean, he really just buying private islands and then just and then just giving them away. Or is he just realizing, I mean, I think his view counts like 100 million per video. So he probably could know, like, I'm going to get this much money from ad revenue. And I don't know. What would you think? A hundred million view video. What kind of ad revenue would you get on a video like that? Oh, well, because they love him so much that the ad revenue for him is going to probably be way better than someone like, you know, me or anybody else. I mean, a hundred million views. Oh, my gosh. Is it like five is it like five cents of you? No. So so let's see here. Last time I had a video that had like four hundred fifty thousand views and made it, I think, four thousand dollars. So I'm thinking if he had a hundred million views on a video, what is that? Well, while you calculate that, I wanted to mention that the Bible says in Matthew Chapter six, take heed that you do not your arms before men to be seen of them. Otherwise, you have no reward of your father, which is in heaven. And Mr. Beast, to me, just seems like the kind of guy that wants to blow a trumpet as loud as he possibly can to talk about how nice he is and all the things that he's giving away and things of that nature. Well, and again, I'm not against people giving money. I'm not against people even theoretically at being public in certain contexts. But as you mentioned from this video or from the verse, I'm sorry, is that he has his reward. So, of course, his reward is getting this giant YouTube channel. But this is more of like a gimmick. It's you know, I give money just to get a view on a video and then I get paid. If if your conversion rate is accurate, you would be getting about a cent per view because if you had a four hundred thousand video view count and you got four thousand dollars, that's about one penny per view. So I don't know, again, if that's accurate as far as like what they how they determine exactly how much money you get paid. But different genres make different amounts of money as they can put better ads or something. Yeah. Right. So what would that be? A hundred hundred. That's like what? See, bro, that's insane. So he would make one hundred thousand dollars for that one video. So do I feel like he would make more? Well, if it is at your conversion rate, it'd be one hundred thousand dollars. We have Simon's Elote's in the chat room saying math comes out to about eight hundred thousand dollars for one hundred million views. One hundred million views. That's why I would want to know what his calculate how he calculated that. But again, if you take because we'd have to divide by a thousand. But if you take one hundred million divided by a thousand, it's one hundred thousand. Oh, my gosh. My phone's jacking up. OK, let's see. Let's see. Let's see. I don't do that. If I got. This is out of my realm of expertise here. What do you know? Do you like cookies? Click on click on the Mr. Beast Web site here and see if we can pull that up and we can get maybe we can order Ben some cookies. Sounds good to me. Yeah. I feel like he would. About eight hundred thousand. Sounds right. Yeah, I think Simon's Elote's got it. A hundred million views. Yeah, that that sounds about right. Eight hundred thousand. A hundred thousand wouldn't even be close. And Simon's Elote says he used Cassidy making four thousand for five hundred thousand views. So that was his methodology. And he probably Mr. Beast probably got more. He probably made a million dollars off each video. I mean, I wouldn't be getting that easy in a hundred million views. Well, I could see him. Yeah, he could have a placement more like that to sponsorships as well. I mean, a lot of YouTubers will take a few seconds during their video to promote a sponsor. They're getting paid for that. So it's not just ad money. You have to think about the fact that they have brands going to them and saying, hey, we want to advertise our product. Will you do a paid plug in the middle of your video or towards the end of the video? A lot of different. You're right. I was wrong. So it's it is if we do one cent, he would make a million dollars on the video. So that sounds right. So and again, that's if he's getting the same conversion rate as Cassidy. If he's getting a higher percent, like if he's getting more than one cent per video, then he would actually have a million per just on the ad revenue. That doesn't include paid promotions. That doesn't include anything else, which interestingly enough to me is and I don't know how this works. But with Google ads, you can you can pay them and they'll drive traffic to your video. And I was trying to think about this, but I'm like, if you kind of pay around four to five cents per view on Google ads. But I was thinking, like, if you get paid four to five cents, you would almost just be incentivized to just do as much Google advertising as humanly possible because you're going to recoup all of that money back just on the ad revenue alone. So I don't know if YouTube partners with these people and gives them like special discounts on their advertising or vice versa. And they almost make it to where it's just like free for them to advertise on YouTube. They advertise for them for free. I think they just advertise for them for free because they're recommending the crap out of their videos. They're pushing them harder than anyone. Like they don't need to pay for nothing. Did we did we pull up the cookies? I want to look at Mr. Beast. I want to hear another person's claiming if you Google it, it says two million per video. Oh, I mean, this guy is loaded with. Yeah, but he's he he's humble, man. So, well, he does. Here's the thing. If he was making money off of videos where he's counting to one hundred thousand, some of the other ones read the dictionary. He read B movie script. I don't know. Read longest English word. He Ubered across America. I mean, some of those are pretty interesting. Like, you know, if someone's going to do something really entertaining or they're going to do something really unique, I think that that makes sense that they could have a lot of views and if they want to get money on that, go for it. But it's such a gimmick to just I'm going to give away 10 percent of the money I'm going to make on a video and essentially claim that I'm such a great person by giving that money away or something like that. I mean, I'm doing it to make himself money. Well, that's philanthropy. Oh, it is philanthropy. I mean, it's basically advertising because that's how a lot of companies work. They you go to a restaurant and they'll have little coupons and it'll say two dollars off a taco. What if they said we gave 20 million dollars away because they had coupons for their tacos? I mean, that's basically the same premise as this guy. Now, at least at least he has a product pull up his product for a moment here. Looks like we have a chocolate chip cookies. Mr. B's cookies. He also has, I think, chocolate bars. Click on the shop. And these look pretty good. And I do like chocolate chip. Do the milk chocolate bar. Now, I have to I have to get me some. OK. Took that seriously. You want the cookies or the chocolate cookies? OK. So we have to order been some some cookies here. Now, the cookies at Wal-Mart. Oh, really? What? He's in Wal-Mart. That's big. All right. That's where I go do my shopping. His chocolate bars, though, at least look at the ingredients. I think if you scroll down, it tells you the ingredients. It's it's organic. Look at that. It's organic grass fed milk. All right. Organic milk. This is exactly what I'm looking for here. I might want the chocolate, too. OK. Cange. I want both the chocolate and the. So next next week, we've got to eat his chocolate bars and cookies. I'm down. I mean, he said if we subscribe, we get a cookie. So how does that work? I'll hit subscribe. We'll have to send some to Cassidy. We'll give you some some chocolate. You don't get to be the biggest YouTuber you get. You get to eat Mr. Beast's chocolate. Yeah. So I mean, I mean, you know, like like I've done videos where I've paid for people's groceries and stuff like that. But I'll be honest, like, yeah, basically money. It helps them out like everybody wins. I'm not trying to do it to be a good person. Well, and again, like I understand why it's done for the premise of the show. But at the end of the day, like I wouldn't put it down as my accomplishments. You know, I think that that's kind of weird. Like it's just it's just a way to make money for the film. It's a form of advertising, as it were. And, you know, in some cases, I'm not even against it. Like, let's say let's say Hurricane Katrina happens and some company says, you know, we're going to donate a million cans of food and we want other companies to donate water and whatever kind of supplies. And we're doing this is just the example of helping these people in need. And they just genuinely want to like encourage other people to help like a brand or something like that. I don't think that's necessarily really that bad. That's not really I don't think what the point of that versus. I think the point of the verse is to say, like, look at my accomplishments. I'm giving money away. It's like that's not really bragging about it. Yeah, it's not really an accomplishment. That's that's where to me it's kind of just it's kind of crossing the line. And so I don't know. This guy's just a gimmick. I mean, has he does not do anything anymore? It's ever to give money away. That's what it seems to me that that he is. So, yeah. OK, what about PewDiePie now? PewDiePie used to be the champion on YouTube for forever. I've I don't think I've ever watched a single video. Have you ever watched a video? I've never seen a single one of his videos. I do know that he's essentially a gaming channel. He records himself playing video games. And apparently there's a video of him playing Minecraft that got 53 million views. Wow. Him playing Minecraft. So he's I'm sure popular with a lot of young kids. It's a it's a thing now where kids like to watch other people play video games on YouTube. And I'm assuming that this guy, he has one hundred and eleven million subscribers. And he, yeah, just records himself playing games. He does a meme review series, vlogging, things like that. Isn't he like an atheist or something? I don't know that I have no idea. You know, have you ever watched a PewDiePie video, Cassidy? Like a long time ago, but I didn't never consistently watched him. Does anybody even watch this guy? I mean, how do you have one over three tonight? Maybe we can see if the chat room has anybody watched PewDiePie, a video, anyone in the chat that has an opinion on this guy who appears to create content for the ages of six to twelve. Somebody said that content is like random. It's just it's it's none of it's the same. It's like it'll be gaming and it's like reacting to something and it's this and it's that it's like, like, well, he doesn't really have like a specific niche, it seems like. Yeah. Here's here's a question. Is is PewDiePie like a genuinely talented content creator? Or is he like the first in the pyramid scheme that is YouTube in the sense that, you know, anybody that kind of gets in on a multilevel marketing or pyramid scheme, they typically are going to do the best just because they're the first content creator. They're kind of the first person out there. And then by getting more and more people following, it just kind of naturally is a progression where you just keep rising at the top. He works with YouTube like like what is your perspective on someone like this? Well, he definitely like he's had really slow growth. I mean, he's like from what I saw, like his channel grew pretty fast because he started early. But I mean, as far as recently, like it's been really slow growth. Like he isn't he's really talked about like he used to be. He's kind of fizzled out a little bit. Yeah. From what I've seen, it's like more Mr. Beast and stuff like that now. What about I don't know how popular they are, but what is that? There's like some group where they do like sports tricks and they've grown. Oh, Dude Perfect. Yeah, Dude Perfect. How many how many subscribers there is they have now? They're probably like what, 30 million, 58.9 million. Wow. They've gone. They've grown really fast. Yeah, they're here, too. They're in the DFW area. Yeah, they're in Frisco. I remember watching some of their early videos and I kind of thought they were some of them were decent. But then it seemed like they just went so commercialized that I just like totally lost interest. But it seems like they just got like even more popular by selling out. Are they somebody you've ever watched before? I mean, I've seen like one video, I think, where they're doing some trick shots or whatever. I mean, that's about it. I don't sit there and watch them like that. But I saw I saw one of the guys talking at a church, like giving his testimony. It's a megachurch one time. Is he saved or what? I mean, I just briefly saw him talking like I don't know. We should ask John McArthur. John McArthur could tell us if he's saved, if he's done the works and has the sanctification. Here's a name that you're familiar with, Pastor Shelley, big popular guy on YouTube. What about Logan Paul? Logan Paul. Twenty three point six million subscribers. That's a pretty big audience. And what about his brother, Jake? Does Jake have a YouTube channel or is it just Logan? Is Logan the YouTube guy? Yeah, he does. OK, because didn't Jake recently lose a boxing match or something like this first? Yeah, he just lost. Yeah, I saw Logan Paul recently on a video and he was just like mocking Christianity, mocking the Lord Jesus Christ. Proud to be an Antichrist Jew. I guess it's shocking that someone that's like that just rocket skyrocketing on YouTube. How many how many viewers does he even have or subscribers? He has twenty three point six million subscribers on YouTube. Big celebrity on YouTube. Why is he even popular? Just because he started at the right time. He started at the right time. And then he was really big on Vine. That that app was like 15 second videos. Does that even exist anymore? Not that I know. Now everybody went off of it to YouTube. So so something funny that happened is and I don't obviously now that I know that about Logan Paul, I think he's a piece of garbage. But yeah, a few years ago, he actually like he infiltrated I think it was like the Flat Earth Society or something. Yeah. And he like made them think he believed it. And then he ended up just trolling him. I thought that was kind of funny. I heard about that and I thought, oh, this guy sounds funny. And then I watched the video of him denying Christ. And I'm like, he has to blaspheme the Lord Jesus Christ. And he's a Jew, of course. And Jake Paul is a Jew. And Dr. Mike or whatever. You brought him up earlier, Cassidy. Is that the right guy? Dr. Mike? Yeah, I know. Yeah. Guess what? Jew. Are you are you saying that there's a coincidence or is this just... It's just Jew, Jew, Jew, Jew, Jew, Jew, Jew. It's obviously random. There's no connection whatsoever. But all the most popular and powerful people in the world are Jews. Jew, Jew, Jew, Jew, Jew, Jew. I mean, how how how how is this related, though? I mean, obviously, if you worship the devil and you have no morals, that's not going to help you in this world. Of course not. What's whatsoever. And it's totally unrelated. It is completely unrelated and coincidental. So you two mean we certainly don't don't ban us. We don't want to say anything for fear of the Jews. Absolutely. Now, I think we have some more YouTube. But just that's like some of the top people so far that we've seen. It all seems to be just kind of like, you know, sorry for my frank speech, which is garbage. I mean, what? Why? Why is it that YouTube is rising to the top? Just only garbage is that. Here's the question. Is that a true reflection of America? Are we really looking in the mirror or is there a group out there trying to make us garbage? What is what is your opinion, Cassidy? Oh, don't say that. Don't say that. No, they wouldn't want us to be garbage. They would want that. They would want to indoctrinate us and our kids or anything like that, man. Of course. Yeah, 100 percent. Like people don't actually like this garbage is just like that's what gets pushed. So they happen to click on it and then they get brainwashed. But do you think I mean, again, these videos got a lot of views and I don't know if YouTube manipulates their algorithm as far as you count like and how they do that entirely. But at the same time, it does seem like some of these people at least are getting a sizable amount of views. They're getting a sizable amount of traffic. And, you know, for me, I want to know, like, if the algorithms were completely neutral. There is no, you know, manipulation. What people put in their search results is kind of a reflection of what they truly want. The or the results are organic naturally. Do you think that these any of these people are going to be rising the top? Or do you think it's all fake? If if people were putting what they truly want in it. Yeah. YouTube's just totally just putting only content out that people want as far as the searches, the algorithms, they're not manipulating any of the results. You know, I think we're going to agree if none of the results were manipulated, like like right now, I don't think a lot of these people will be rising to the top. Now, I do think here's my opinion. I do think that some of the top results would still be the same. And it's the music videos, because the music videos are really a largest some of the largest view counts. And I think it's mostly because people use YouTube as just a way to listen to music while working or doing things. And so a lot of times that's probably pretty, pretty close to what it would be, regardless of how much they're. You notice, too, that if somebody doesn't if somebody doesn't have a major record label, a major satanic record label backing them, that they go nowhere, no matter how good their music is. Like, do you really think that the most talented people are at the top of the music industry? Oh, heck no. Well, I do think what would be funny is if they didn't manipulate it. I think sometimes these covers like people make a cover for some of these songs and it'll get a lot of traction. I think it'd be I think it would exist where there be covers for songs that have more views and listens than the actual original of the song. But they can't allow that because that would just be, you know, basically detrimental to their whole program. It would be embarrassing. It's like, here's someone that sang this way better than you. And of course, they're trying to gain money off of the traffic, generate sales. They obviously it's all about money at the end of the day. And, you know, to some degree, they've got to fund this operation. I mean, they've got so much they've got to have incredible databases and storage issues. And, you know, they've got to pay a lot of people to do some of this stuff. So, you know, money is going to be a factor. But at the end of the day, it seems like it's just turning into just a TV, just garbage heap. And I don't know if it's ever going to get fixed. I mean, God willing, somehow legislation or something would come in here. But, you know, Google and Donald Trump, Google and YouTube have a monopoly and they should be. When Trump was in office, it only just kept getting worse. That's true. That's why we got to get him back in office, Cassidy. Don't you see the logic here? Rumble is pretty much the only option I see as far as things getting better. I do like Rumble a lot and I have hope, even though if you read their terms and conditions, it doesn't sound very good. I have hope that they don't enforce them nearly as rigorously as YouTube does. And I do think that we can get away with a lot more on there than we can on YouTube. That's a fact. That's obvious. So hopefully we can start to maybe turn the tide a little bit and get people to watch us on these other platforms. We're trying to get God resource going. Rumble, I think, is a tremendous alternative. There's a Rumble app on Roku, for those of you who have to watch it on television, like me, and you want to watch it on your TV. You know, there's a there's a Roku app. So my point is, is that if we can just find a way to galvanize our supporters, our audience, and get them on these alternative platforms and siphon some people off of YouTube, then I think we can get back into the digital public square in a sense, not like how it used to be, but at least we can grow some kind of audience in an unfiltered environment. Now, when it comes to YouTube itself, what do you think, like, what is your future with this platform? Like, are you saying, I'm just going to ride it until the wheels come off? I mean, what is what is kind of your viewpoint as far as what's your strategy? Knowing that obviously there's a lot more censorship, they're promoting certain people. I mean, there's still money to be made out there. So do you have kind of a strategy for YouTube specifically? Yeah, so my plan is to just as far as my YouTube channel, I'm just going to post like one one prank, one comedy video every week. And then on Rumble, I'm going to post a predator video like every week. So but then everything I upload to YouTube automatically also goes to Rumble. So but on Rumble, I'll be uploading that stuff that I can't post on YouTube. So and then everything just going to carry over because every time I post a new video on Rumble, I always announce it on YouTube. So there's a lot of people go over and watch it like those last couple of videos got like 40, 50,000 views on Rumble. So I mean, people go over and watch them and people share them. It seems like a good idea to try and draw what audience you have over to other platforms, kind of like diversifying your portfolio, as it were, as a content creator. If you're consistently uploading to like, obviously, you know, it's going to take a little bit of time. It's not like in one or two weeks, you're just going to have this massive audience on Rumble. It's just, you know, if you've got to, you just got to consistently upload. So, you know, it took me a year and a half or so to like really start getting serious growth on YouTube. So, you know, I'd say a year and a half on Rumble. I mean, it's going to be insane because if you get on now and you're consistently posting, I mean, you're on early. You're on in the technically in the beginning of the beginning stages on Rumble. So now is a good time for it blows up too much. He has a good he's in a good genre, by the way. Yeah. For staying on YouTube for as long as you can, because comedy, as long as it's not political, but you know, a lot of your videos are just comedy, right? You're not you're not a political person necessarily. You're you're just entertained. You're trying to entertain people, trying to make people laugh. You're a comedian. And the things that you're putting on your main channel seem YouTube safe to me in that sense. So I think you have a lot more mileage in your genre compared to people who are in the political arena or people who are putting up political content rather, where there's no mileage. Yeah. Yeah, there's not any I mean, as far as you guys go, I think you'd have good success on Rumble. So I would just be consistent on there. And over time, it's definitely going to grow, especially when as the platform is growing tremendously. What do you think about obviously someone like Alex Jones? He is in an area where he's totally he's totally eliminated from virtually everything and then just kind of built his own platform. Do you still think that that's a viable solution to just kind of not necessarily ignore social media, but someone building their own platform? I think even Steven Crowder is kind of entertaining the idea of kind of building his own network platform arena. What is kind of your thoughts on something like that? I personally think unless like those guys are just so big, man. And to grow your own platform, that is not easy. But now like, okay, we didn't really have Rumble back then. But now, like Rumbles growing a lot. So there actually is an alternative. Unlike before, there really was an alternative. It was just YouTube pretty much. So I feel like for you guys, actually an alternative. So I feel like it would kind of it just wouldn't be necessary. Well, I know that Gab is also an interesting media platform. I like Gab a lot. But I know they've been censored hard on they can't have like an app. They can't even have bank accounts. They can't have a lot of things. I know they're trying to do like Gab TV and stuff, and I really like it, but it seems like some of their platforms are maybe not developed as much yet. They're not really as intuitive. They can't have the apps. So that's definitely kind of a limiting factor to some degree. But I like these platforms. I think the problem, though, is we have like an oversaturation of platforms to some degree where there is a lot of people that have tried to kind of build a platform. But then it's just so hard. I mean, even with Twitter competitors, you had like Getter, you had Parler, which is Parler even still a thing? I thought Ye tried to buy it. And then I think that fell through after he said he loved Hitler. So I don't know. I don't know what's going on with that anymore. They have I think Truth Social would probably be the most popular Twitter alternative out there. I would imagine since Donald Trump is on there and he has a massive following. Yeah, but, but Elon, Elon buying out Twitter, has that not killed Truth Social a little bit or some of the momentum it had? I think it probably hindered it tremendously. And you see some people that are kind of clamoring for Trump to get back on Twitter, which I'm that guy. I think he should. I think he should just get back on Twitter and go back on his, you know, the platform that he used back in the day to make libtards cry. Well, I mean, I don't know. Is Twitter really the is Trudy is Twitter really going to be a censorship free zone where you can just say whatever I'm banned? So I can't tell you. Well, you know, at least we have another special guest coming on. We have Trump who has decided to join us and to give us a speech. Where's your loyalty to Donald Trump? This is actually Trump's biggest support. Oh, this is true. I misspoke. This is what is the backwoods? Billy is going to love. Tell us a little bit about how Donald Trump will save America from the censorship that we're seeing in 2023. So y'all don't know it right now, but Donald Trump is actually the president still. Joe Biden is not. He's being Joe. Biden's actually not really Joe Biden. He's been played by many Hollywood actors such as Jim Carrey. Get it? Because Jim Carrey played the mask now when when Donald Trump really takes back to buy a house for good. What's going to happen is all these elites and cabal members, they're going to be out in Guantanamo Bay. And Hillary is going to go out there and they're going to be held for trial before firing squall. And Robert was Robert Robert. I forgot it. Robert Robert Kennedy or J.F.K. Jr. That's what it was. It's still. That's what Q said. Yeah, I know. Right. Is like crazy. Yes. Look, at the end of the day, it's just funny because, OK, they they say like some half truths and then they'll say this nonsense to get people all confused because I mean, it's obviously controlled opposition. Yeah. What about you know, when it comes to controlled opposition, you know, what do you think about certain conservative talking heads? I mean, do you think people like Alex Jones are controlled opposition? Do you think Steven Crowder? Do you think Ben Shapiro? Like, what is your view on controlled opposition? A million percent. Ben Shapiro. A hundred million percent. Steven Crowder. I mean, come on, dude. And what's it? Ben Shapiro was telling people in the beginning, yeah, you guys need to get the magic potion. OK, like, go out, get it, stay home. And Steven Crowder, the COVID shot, there's some other stuff he says that I could just tell he's a sellout. I mean, do anybody who's just like and they won't say certain things, obviously, because they don't want to lose their audience. There's people that claim to be, oh, I look like truthers. I love the truth so much. But they won't ever like say anything bad about Trump because they don't want to lose their audience. What about Mark Dice? I mean, Mark Dice seems to be the biggest Trump's fan. I don't know. I know. And I don't get it because he says so much other good stuff. And I'm like, dude, I have never once heard you call Trump out for loving the jabby jab so much. Yeah, that seems to be this weird cognitive dissonance. Like, you have a guy who brags about the vaccine. He brags about how he's the one who introduced it, how it's safe, it's effective. Everyone should get it. He endorses it. And no one on the right seems to want to hold his feet to the fire on this. And to me, that's when you become like the left because the left are a bunch of herd mentality, brainless zombie morons who will back the Democratic Party no matter what. So why not be different from them if you're conservative and actually hold your leadership's feet to the fire? This is what they would say. So Trump didn't know. Trump didn't know about the vaccine. He's just unaware and he's a boomer. He's just not aware of these things. He didn't even know he went on Epstein's private jet. He didn't know whose private jet it was. And the reason he hung out with the Clintons is because he's getting inside information. Trump is actually an undercover agent. Trump is actually going to save the children. 4D chess. 4 or 5D chess. Yep, that's right. He's playing 90D chess right now. And to me, I don't think that he deserves all these excuses. I think people should just call him out in areas where they disagree. And look, I'll praise him in areas where I think he does well. I liked his speech the other day talking about demonic globalists and his foreign policy. I thought that was great. But at the same time, I also think that him shilling for the vaccine and sodomites is trash. So you can do both. Well, you know, he does know the Bible better than anyone. And I mean, he loves two Corinthians. It is his favorite portion of the Bible. So, you know, I think we need to play a game here since we're on the top. Since I brought up churches, you know, and we brought up YouTubers, there's this crazy church called Transformation Church. And they like play basketball for the sermon. I had a clip where there's this guy. It's like the number one church on YouTube. And apparently he's playing basketball. So that's why I'm you know, that's why we're not successful. But I want to see if we can play ever watch me hoop. I have he gives a mean elbow, but I want to play just a few minutes of that clip. And then while we're watching that clip, let's go to around about two minutes and in the video and we're going to play. I guess just a minute or two. I guessed his race correctly when you said basketball. Well, you're just a racist. But we're going to play a little clip of this. And then I think we have an actual game where we're going to try and get some crazy churches. But let's let's see. This is what people want here. This is the kind of church that people want to go to is basketball. Oh, this guy, Mike Todd. Oh, gosh, no. I like to celebrate what their life meant to me. And for me, I have four brothers. That means we all grew up watching basketball, the NBA. I have an older brother named Gabe, who is a die hard Lakers fan, literally have a picture of him crying after the Lakers lost the championship. I keep it for blackmail one day. It might be on the screen. But today I want to start this service off like I've never started any service off before, because the vision here is to represent God to the lost and found for transformation in Christ. So I want to represent today. And today we're starting this service off with a dunk contest. Transformation Church, welcome to the Are you ready to rumble? Pastor of Transformation Church, can you make some noise for Michael? And our next contestant, his opponent coming in at six, six, a college basketball player. Give it up for Michael. Here you go. Let's see what you got. Let's see what you got. You look like an NBA player, but you ain't got none. Hey, that was good. Oh, man. I made the goal. That's impressive. I don't think it's got a goal. That's it. Oh, oh, oh, oh. Did you see that he got like at least six inches there? Let me see what you got, bro. Let me see what you got, bro. What part of the Bible is this chapter and verse on this? Can I get a chapter and verse? Oh, you guys got to do this at your church. Absolutely. I totally now I understand why nobody's watching me versus you, Pastor Shelley. I challenge you. Yeah. Oh, now he's got an old school jersey. Who's this guy? Give me the players. Brian. Brian. Kobe Bryant. Oh, yeah. It's Kobe. I'm like, what in the world? That's football. Yeah. Kobe, huh? Could you beat Kobe Bryant? Oh, now they're now they're putting it up to 10 feet. Oh, yeah. Good luck. Ten feet basket. It's an actual. Yeah. Oh, oh, man. So how does this tie in spiritually? I'd love to know how he ties this in. Oh, let's see. He's taking a leap of faith. Oh, that's what it is. Oh, now he's going to pray. Please give me the boings of Vince Carter in the name of Jesus. OK, so we're making a mockery of prayer. Just going to mock prayer. Yeah, I love this person in the chat. These are the same people calling IFB churches insane. Thank you for that comment. As he's at. I agree with you. We're the crazy ones. Now, as you watch this. Oh, total failure. As you watch this buffoon. Remember, we're the crazy ones. All right, you can cut the video. What in the world? This this is what YouTube serves you up if you say, I want church this morning. This is Christianity on YouTube. You know, fake Kobe trying to dunk on a 10 foot goal and he can't even hit the rim. Exhibit A of Christianity on YouTube. If you want to be a Christian, if you want to be a preacher, if you want to be a church, that's what you have to do to remain on their platform. A dunking contest. All right. Well, you know, church is getting insane, too. And it's not just on YouTube. Our production staff has prepared a game for us where they're going to present a church name and we have to guess if it's real or fake. And we can let Cassidy play in this, too. So we are all going to have to vote. We'll give them a second to pull these things up on the screen. But I think we have about 10 we can play the game with. And so we're going to we're going to put the name up. I'll read the name and then we got to vote. Yay or nay. And then we'll reveal it. So let's let's get our first church pulled up here. Real or fake? Egypt Chapel Baptist Church. That's got to be fake. Yeah, that's got to be fake. I'm going true. I'm going real. Obviously fake. All right. Let's see. They're all true, actually. They're all true. Yeah. Egypt Chapel Baptist Church. Nailed it. OK. Which spiritually a Sodom in Egypt, the Bible says. Yeah, but maybe it's in Egypt. Is this a U.S. church? Do we even know? Oh, is this in Egypt? This is a church in the U.S. This is in Texas. They're all in Texas. Wow. Egypt Chapel Baptist Church in Texas. I guess they really have everything. All right. Let's go. Let's go round two. What do we got? I'm already winning. You guys got to pick it up here. Real or fake? The Episcopal Church of the Annunciation. Real. That's fake. Fake. I'm going fake. All right. Let's see. Let's see what we got here. Real church. Good night. What in the world? They're just all real. The Episcopal Church of the Annunciation. Did we all say fake on that one? No, I think Catherine said real. I said real. You said real? OK. Ben, you're losing. Thank you. I think the production staff's helping us with this, since you can't do math apparently, too. No. All right. Number three. Let's go for it. Impeccable St. Mary's Catholic Church. I'm going to say real on this one, too. Impeccable. All right. We're all saying real. The one time I said real. It's fake. It's fake. The one time I said real. I thought this was Bill McGregor's Catholic version of himself. All right. Let's give us another one. The one time I said real. We all failed on that one. We all screwed that one up. All right. Chikina Tabernacle Baptist Church. I'm going to say real. Real. I'm going to go. Yeah, there it is. I was going to say fake, but I'm wrong. OK. You said fake. All right. I waited too long. What is this? Chikina Glory! The Chikina! All right. I think Cassidy's winning. We got to get this. We got to spot these fakes. Come on. Give us another one. The Infallible True Church of History with the Messiah. What in the world? All right. Say that again. Hold on. Say that again one more time. The Infallible True Church of Yeshua, the Messiah of the Apostolic Faith. I mean the church name is a paragraph. Can you imagine the email on that? It's like Pastor at the Infallible True Church of Yeshua, the Messiah of the Apostolic Faith. Yeah, or imagine if you were making a video, like how Pastor Anderson always makes a video. Hi, this is Pastor Anderson from Faith Forward Baptist Church in Tippie, Arizona. Imagine this is Pastor so-and-so from the Infallible True Church of Yeshua, the Messiah of the Apostolic Faith in the DFW area. Oh, man. Think about just the business card, the sign. Maybe it's like T-I-T-C-Y-T-M-T-A-F. Imagine going door to door. Hi, my name is Ben from the Infallible True Church of Yeshua, the Messiah of the Apostolic Faith. It's hard to even say. I can't even get it out. I think this one has to be real just because of how long it is. Yeah, I'm going to say real. Fake. Fake. Yeah. You know what? I love our production staff, but I don't know if they're this creative. No, they're not that clever. That's true. That's kind of a diss, but it's kind of true. All right, let's go to the next one. Well, here's a trick though. If you ever do a multiple choice test and they have like short answer, short answer, really long and short, it's almost always the really long one is the right one because people are just inherently lazy. So when they're coming up with fake answers, they never go with a really long one. So I'm just telling you like on a test, you know, if you look at a really, really long answer, it's almost always the right answer. So I just helped everybody pass every single college exam. I wish I knew that when I was in college. All right. Judas tree apostolic assembly of God. No way. I want to say fake because I want that to be fake, but it's fake. I'm going true. It's fake. We're so gullible. It has to be real. I got that one right. I'm winning by about 50 points. Okay. But if the other one, if the other one could be real, I mean, come on, man, this one could have been real. Anything can be real apparently. All right. Let's, let's go for our, our, let's keep going. What do we got? Yeshua house. Yeshua house. True. Yeah, it's true. It's gotta be true. It's true. Of course. All right. We're getting better at this. That's in Israel. All of them are in Texas. Oh, these are all local. What are the beliefs, the beliefs, re-beliefs? Yeah. What can, is this live or is this just a picture? Oh, it's a screenshot. That's all right. I'm sure that they're doctrinally sound Cassidy. Yeah. They believe in Yeshua. Let's go ahead and go to the next one. Holy temple Christ, Holy sanctified church. Holy temple Christ. I'm going to say fake. I'm going fake on this one. I'll say fake too. All right. We're all fake. Ah, what in the world? Holy temple Christ, Holy. It's just like these people are just dumb. Like who came up with that name? It's like they just sanctified church through words together. And then they're just like church. All right. Let's go. Let's go for another one. Nebuchadnezzar temple. That's the greatest name for a church I've ever heard in my life. I'm going to go fake as well. I'm saying fake too. No, you know what? I'm going to say real because our world has just slipped into the depths of hell. And this has to be real. All right. It's fake. That is funny though. How many more do we, how many more do we have left? We have two more. All right. Let's go. Let's go for the second to last. What do we got? The infallible church. How is this different than the other one? Yeah, it was a mistake. It's okay. Here we go. All right. Mount Moroni, missionary Baptist. Moroni is the prophet in the Book of Mormon. Yeah. Because it's like, and they talk about the land of Moron in the Book of Mormon. I'm going to, I'm going to say true. I'll say true. Oh, it's fake. The Mormons got us again. What is this? All right. Our last one. Wait, before we get, before we vote though, what was our totals here? All right. Apparently we have no idea because the points don't matter. I'm winning. I was keeping track. I'm keeping track. I'm winning. This sounds unverified. On to the next one. Rainbow Church of Christ. Wow. That's fake. Fake. I'm going to say true. Fake. Oh. Well, hey, you know what the rainbow is? They're taking back the rainbow. Yeah, it is a covenant, sign of a covenant, the token of God's covenant that he would never flood the earth again. We need to, we need to look up the beliefs on that one. I bet you they're anti, I bet you they're anti-sodomite. They're preaching Leviticus 2013 and their sermons consist of pastors getting up behind the pulpit, leather-lung preachers saying we're taking the rainbow back. That's a pretty strong bold stand for a church of Christ. I don't think that the, I mean, is there any denomination that preaches Leviticus 2013 other than Baptist? Presbyterian? That's a Baptist church. I don't know. There was that church that was right next to you and the pastor preached against you and he's like, I don't remember, but I just remember him saying, he's a little older. He was like, you know, I've read Leviticus 2013 and to this day I still don't understand it. Yeah, we put a video up with that and it was like going super fast. And then our channel got nuked. It was just like, oh, I think that was the Nazarene guy. I wanted to make a, uh, it'd be funny to like make a skit like that, playing one of those kinds of pastors in a library or something. Oh man. I just, I was going to do a video actually at like a liberal college campus watching Steven Anderson in the library where, and put it on rumble where he's just going nuts. Yeah, you should do that. So apparently the church is on rainbow drive. I named it after the street, the street game. I gave him a little too rainbow. And I just don't know what that means. The verse that I, the only verse I understand is love thy neighbor. We love all the pedophiles, murderers. Oh, he said that. Actually, he said that it's easier to pray for like these drug cartel, child molesting type people, sex traffickers. He said it was easier to pray for sex traffickers than to pray for our church. That's right. That's what he said in his sermon. That's what he said because he was a sack of garbage. I mean, I think somebody's got through his phone. And they delivered sandwiches and food and water or whatever to the sodomites protesting us, which here's what I want to know. How can our group, you know, our group does say that we believe that, you know, the protesters and those people should be put to death based on Leviticus 23. Amen. And they say that we should just be put to death. They want us killed, murdered in our house and raped and every horrible thing. So why is it that the church didn't want to give us sandwiches for all the horrible things they said about us? Why is it always, you know, what we said about them that's just so terrible that he even admits in the Bible, he just doesn't understand it? They're special. They're special. We see they have a mental condition. You don't. Ah, they do have a mental condition and I definitely don't. So I would agree with that. He wanted to help the mentally disabled. All right. Well, I want to ask you a few more questions. What do you think is your favorite YouTube channel apart from your own content and stuff like that? Like what's a YouTube channel you like or is there a content creator out there that inspired you? Is there someone that you, you know, kind of more your content, not necessarily just a church or something? Oh yeah. Like back in the day before I started, I mean, I watched people like, I'd say like Big Doss, Limitless Guy, Limitless. He did like pranks and stuff. Epic 5 TV at Bassmaster. Bassmaster is a classic. Yeah. Yeah. I didn't even find out about him until like 20, almost 2018. But as far as now though, I pretty much just, I don't really watch that kind of stuff. I just watch like sermons and things like that. Would you look at that? I mean, would you look at it? Would you just look at that? I mean, I think I saw a couple of videos of Big, is it Big Doss? I don't know if I'm pronouncing that right. Is he still on YouTube? Yeah, he's on YouTube. I can't even remember what the video is about. Well, he just did more like awkward pranks back in the day. And then, what's it? Epic 5 TV. That guy, he did like just a lot of trolling on the Vegas strip. I thought it was pretty funny. Well, I want to say this about pranks. And Cassidy, I've said this to you in private and you agreed. I think that there are some really funny public prank videos and public prank channels out there. But there are some channels where they just go so overboard. They're harassing people and they're getting in people's personal space. And they're clearly antagonizing people to the point of trying to start a physical altercation. And I don't find those ones to be funny at all. And you don't do that at all. I'm glad you don't. There are some that go way overboard, I think. I think I saw one and it was a guy trying to pick fights with people he thought were in a real gang or something like that. Oh, there's a lot of them like that. Oh, those are fake. It's very easy to fake them. How many of these videos are real though? If anybody is pulling a gun, if it says gun pulled, knife pulled, fighting, trying to throw gang signs at gang members, gold digger pranks all fake. Yeah, the gold digger pranks are fake. It's actually easier than we would think to fake them. Because I saw a prankster. I saw this one time where a YouTube public prank guy did a video that looked real and then at the very end he said, by the way, this was all fake. And I'm thinking, wow, I didn't even realize that. It's pretty convincing. A lot of them can be convincing. I feel like all the ones that are hidden camera on wife or husband, they're always fake. Because they're going to know by then. They're going to get it, dude. It's like they have the video camera and you can tell someone is going like this in the kitchen or whatever, like following around. You didn't notice a giant guy holding a phone walking around filming you in your kitchen. Dude, my camera is small, man. Usually my cameraman, he's got his phone on top of the camera and it's against his body and stuff like that. And he's wearing all black. So you don't even see the camera. I was the victim of a public, I don't know if the victim is the right word, but they got me one time a public prank YouTube channel. I was in the airport. I had a hoodie on. Somebody put a speaker in my hoodie that played rap music really loud. And I guess I didn't give them the reaction they wanted because they never posted it. But I thought that was kind of funny. When it comes to making content, how much time does it take for you to come up with a video idea? Are you making these spontaneous or do you always have the skit planned? How does that work? Some of the stuff I have planned and written down, but then some of the stuff is kind of random and it just happens. There was one thing that I was telling him, because people worship, you know how people worship Donald Trump? Anyways, I was going up to people in Bass Pro Shop and I was like, how you doing, sir? Do you mind if I pray for you? And I was like, Donald Trump, can you hear us? Can you hear us right now, Donald Trump? And dude, this one guy, he flipped out on me. He was like, I pray to Jesus. And I was like, because I try to tell him it's a joke, dude. It's just like making fun of how people worship Trump and stuff like that. Because they do. They idolize the crap out of him. Yeah, but most of the reactions were pretty dang funny, man. Have you had anybody actually hit you or something? Or have you had someone assault you while making a video? So one time, this was within the last couple, this was two months ago, so there was just a misunderstanding. And I thought I was going to get jumped by five black dudes. And then when they found out I was just filming a video and it was a joke, they were all cool about it. But until then, I guess they looked like they wanted to jump me. So I was kind of scared, man. I was like, oh, crap. What about, you know, you make these videos and kind of recently you did some interviews with Pastor Anderson, you shared some of his gospel videos and stuff. So, yeah. How did you end up discovering his content or did you end up getting saved and then watching it? Or did you find his content and then end up getting saved later? How did that work? So, OK, is an interesting story, actually. So I don't know. Are we on YouTube right now? Yes, we are. We can cut the YouTube stream. I mean, I'll just censor myself. So anyways, he showed me this video randomly where Pastor Anderson's talking. I didn't even know who the heck he was at the time. So he's talking and he's like, hey, you know what? I love gays. I want my kids to be gay. You know, I want everyone to be gay. But what my kids won't be is a filthy, you know what? And when I saw that, I was like, that is the funniest thing ever. Like, is this real life? Because every pastor I've seen, they're always like, they just seem like weak. Yeah, watered down. They're not preaching the whole Bible. So I didn't know if it was real or not. And then later on down the road, I ended up looking him up and watching a bunch of his sermons. But there was always people saying like, oh, you know, he's hateful. I didn't really listen. And then I got away from watching like him. And I think I was watching like Pastor Mehe as well. And I got away from that and I started watching like these Calvinists because I had no idea. Right. So I was watching like I never watched John MacArthur, but I was watching like Paul Washer, Ray Comfort. I don't think Ray Comfort is a Calvinist, but he's a false teacher for sure. And I was watching him and I was like, dang, dude, like, how do you even know if you're saved? Like, I don't get it. It doesn't make sense. Yeah. And so and then I was watching some street preachers, too. And then I was I was talking to this buddy, like just an Instagram friend who falls like watches Pastor Anderson and you guys and stuff. And I want to do an interview with Steven Anderson. I don't even remember why, but I want to do an interview with him. So then I got in contact with him through Pastor Mehea and I end up doing the interview with with Pastor Anderson. And like that next day, I watched his once saved only saved sermon. And I'm like, OK, now everything is making sense to me. It's all making sense. And that just, you know, made everything click. And I started watching all those other sermons. And then I was like, wow, Paul Washer and all these other guys are just false teachers. And I just realized it instantly. That's pretty cool that you were willing to kind of interview him, but you maybe didn't necessarily agree with him or you didn't really even know. You just kind of interested. Yeah, I didn't know his message. I was a fan of his, though, like I was like I was like because I did like the way he preached. I just wasn't sure. Like, you know what I mean? Like, I wasn't I didn't have like a bias where I'm like, oh, he's wrong. I wanted to genuinely wanted to find out the truth. Well, and I think this is proof that the preaching against the homos can actually yield very, very positive results in terms of people getting the gospel right, understanding how to be saved, because it leads to people watching other videos about that subject matter and getting that cleaned up. So, Pastor Shelley, I think right here we have an example of somebody who started out watching the sodomite stuff, anti sodomite preaching, and now turning into a soul winner. Right. It's turned someone into a soul winner. Yeah. I mean, obviously, you know, they want to label us hateful, but the only thing that's hateful is telling lies to people. You know, the truth is not hateful. The truth could be mean. The truth could be blunt. The truth can be raw, but the truth is incapable of being hateful. And so, you know, I believe that whenever you preach the truth on anything, that's the most loving thing you can do. And obviously some truths are uncomfortable. Truths like you're going to go to hell, the truth that you deserve death, all of these different items. But the truth itself is not hateful. Obviously, the truth could be communicating hatred or it could be communicating a negative message. But at the end of the day, communicating truth to someone is the most loving thing you could possibly do. And so I think that resonates with anybody that is open to the truth or open or seeking the Lord. And yet everybody will tell us, you know, it's just, oh, these people are hateful and everything like that. But why would they censor us if it wasn't attractive? Why would they try to shut us down? Why do they have so much propaganda? Because, you know, they know it's true. Like, they're going to push all these other people. You don't see Paul Washer and these other guys getting all that hate because they're not preaching the truth. Which, you know, it's great that someone like you found us and you, you know, were willing to even put your neck on the line a little bit. I mean, you put some gospel videos up, you interviewed Pastor Anderson, things like that. I think it would be hilarious. And I don't know that it'll ever happen. It probably won't. But it'd be hilarious if someone like Mr. Beast or PewDiePie or it's probably not him. But I'm just saying someone like him ended up getting saved or wanting to share content because they're so entrenched and they're so popular that I don't think YouTube would know what to do with themselves. Because if they nuke that person, it would be really bad for them business wise. But at the same time, they can't allow that truth to get out there. So it would just be kind of really funny if you could get one of these giant YouTubers saved or something. But I don't know that it'll ever happen. What do you think? Do you think they would just nuke them and just deal with it? Or do you think they would be, they wouldn't know what to do? I mean, it depends how far they go with it, though. Like how far they go with like what they're, you know, saying publicly and posting, you know. What if they post like a By Boy to Heaven video? I mean, it's like if they had you on the stream or something, I think it'd be fine. They can't do anything about that. Yeah, it just depends on what they say. He's right. Or an interview, like if they brought you on and interviewed you or whatever, like one of the other pastors, like they're not going to do anything. I think they would eliminate the video and they would just tell the person like, we're not going to give you a real shrike on this. But we're just telling you, you're not allowed to do this. And if you keep pressing the mark, then we will eliminate your channel. And they probably wouldn't even eliminate it. They would probably just like keep it up, but not allow him to post anymore. And just like bring in a completely different person to take over their YouTube channel. Oh, gosh. It's like a total Chinese replacement or something. I don't know. What do you think? Who the heck knows? I think what they would probably try and do is if somebody who is very popular, ended up getting saved, liking our movement, is try and put breadcrumbs maybe on their main channel. Where YouTube safe theological content that's geared more towards salvation, geared more towards King James only-ism, geared more towards these doctrines that we can put on YouTube without dealing with the censorship. Maybe they would do that. And that way they could stay within the realm of these stupid nebulous guidelines. But I don't know. I mean, I guess we'll find out. Cassidy is really the closest example we have to this. I mean, he's got almost two million subs. And I know Cassidy, you talk to friends that you know that are on the YouTube platform as well. Other comedians. I mean, when we were out to dinner the one time, another very famous big channel called you. And I know you've been talking to him about spiritual things. So you could see that the truth is spreading very quickly. And we talk about, well, why do they censor us so much? Because without that censorship, the truth would spread so fast that they would not be able to control it because it's attractive, because it's the truth. And they have no way to actually stop it by refuting our arguments. Oh, a hundred percent. And I was going to say something real quick. Because Calvinists don't believe in soul winning, correct? I mean, they they would they like sponsor missionaries and things like that, but they don't really do door to door evangelism unless it's it's. Yeah, this guy told your exception. This guy who watches like Paul Washer, MacArthur told me that so like you can't win souls. That's what he told me. Yeah. I mean, based on their doctrine and their theology, it makes no sense. I mean, if you have zero control. He said also that like say that I for example, that I had a certain sin or whatever, like I drink alcohol. He said, if I don't if I'm not at least willing to stop drinking or if I don't want to stop drinking, I can't get saved. I mean, which sins are we going to put on that list? Because the Bible says that the thought of foolishness is sin. So is someone going to claim that they never have that? Or again, the Bible says to look upon a woman and, you know, basically lust after her is committing adultery in your heart. I think any straight any straight guy is going to make it clear that that's impossible to stop. I mean, I think that, you know, I was talking with somebody else. They were saying you can have children until you die to like men can just basically reproduce all the way to the bitter end. So I don't you know, and I've even heard this, that nursing homes are, you know, hot zones. So like, I don't think that even as you get older, you're going to just stop liking women. I mean, look in the Bible. How many how many men in the Bible get married when they're really old? I mean, Abraham had Sarah and then it's just like she's gone. Katara, you know, I mean, you just have like and he's in his hundreds. So, you know, let alone today when people are in their 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s. There's prerequisites. They give you these false teachers. They give you all these prerequisites to getting saved. Like, look, first, you got to quit drinking. You got to stop, you know, smoking cigarettes. You got to stop watching porn. Stop cussing. Stop. Yeah, exactly. Stop. Stop lying. Just whatever says, you know, obviously everybody has different sins in their life, you know. Yeah, some bigger than others. But you got to stop doing those sins. Then you can believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and get saved. And I want to back you up with scripture talking about Abraham. The Bible tells us it talks about it being not weak in faith. He considered not his own body now dead when he was about 100 years old. Amen. Neither yet the deadness of Sarah's womb. So you have, you know, 100 years old Abraham and yet continuing to do the duty of marriage. Hey, how about this? David, like he's on his deathbed and they literally bring him a brand new virgin bride, Abishag. Abishag. Just to keep him warm. So, I mean. But was there physical things there? They didn't consummate the marriage. But at the same time, like, I don't think he was disinterested in women when you're having a brand new virgin come to basically warm you up. I mean, they were trying to keep him alive and they were thinking like, let's bring in a brand new young lady. So obviously men are still attracted to women till their dying breath, which is the only point I'm making. Is the sense that for obviously you should control your thoughts. It's not an excuse to just think lustful thoughts and do these things. But again, if we're going to say from a temptation perspective, people that are claiming like, you know, I'm recovered from all sin and I don't do this anymore. I am. I don't deliberately sin. See, that's the thing about me. I don't deliberately do it. So if you don't deliberately do it, you're good. Well, I just, I've heard my pastors of old that were not saved say, as long as you're not practicing. He said, you know, everybody sins, but as long as you're not practicing the sin. I'm just like, what makes it become a practice? How many times you got to do it? They're getting that from the modern versions of the Bible that twist first John chapter three and turned it into, he doesn't make a practice. Yeah. Whoever's born of God does not practice sin. So does that mean you get like root beer and you're like, Oh, this is kind of like beer and you're practicing when you're going to actually drink or something. I mean, how does, how does practicing sin even work? They would claim habitual, I would assume. Yeah, obviously. Here's the thing that's funny about that is the King James makes it clear, not, not funny, but in contrast to what they say, the King James says, whosoever is born of God does not commit sin. The Bible says, when you're saved, exactly. The Bible says, when you're saved, all things are become new, not some things, all things have become new. You can't sin. The only way to make sense of verses like that is to understand the old man versus the new man. And I think a lot of confusion stems from people misunderstanding the difference between the flesh and the spirit, the old man and the new man. I was going to say, we should do a skit. We should do a skit. Like, you know how Ray Comfort does his soul winning. And, uh, like you, one of you guys could, or one of us could be the one who's the sole winner and the other person is, you know, you're trying to get saved and you're just telling them like how wicked they are. Just, Hey, so you're a lying blasphemous, murderous, adulterous, thieving, conniving, uh, whatever, you know? And then, um, so, so look, but God did something for you. Do you know what that is? Well, yeah, Jesus died on the cross, right? Yeah. So there's 10 things you must do to get saved. Now you have to repent of all your sins. Yeah. Repent, repent of all your sins. Clean up your life. We had him on the podcast. I care about you. I love you. Yeah. We had him on the podcast and he asked all the people afterwards. He's like, now, now tell me back what you had to do to be saved. And they're like, repent of my sins. And I don't know what the other thing was. It's like, they can't remember anything about believing in Lord Jesus Christ, his death and resurrection, salvation by faith. It's just basically quit being a crappy person and you'll somehow magically be saved. It's all about you. They make it about, that's what they, they make it about you instead of what Jesus did. That's what, that's what these Lordship people do. And Ray Comfort says he doesn't even know what Lordship salvation is. I don't even know what Lordship salvation is. He, um, MacArthur doesn't even know what the difference is between being a disciple and being saved. He has no idea. Because he explains being saved as being a disciple. Well, I heard that John MacArthur doesn't even believe like three quarters of his church is saved. So, uh, what a successful ministry that is. That's great fruit right there. You can't even tell. Paul Washer, Paul Washer did a sermon where he's talking about how wicked the world is and this and that. And I sent it to Ben and, uh, they, people strive to be like the world. They're wicked, whatever. And I remember one sermon he's even talk about, uh, you know, people are on their way to hell and the church, you know, starts applauding him. And he's like, I don't know why you're clapping. I'm talking about you. Okay. So you're Mr. Self-righteous. You're so good, Paul. He's so much better than all the other devoted Christians in the room. So, well, obviously we could, we could probably, we need to have, we need to have another show. Should we do another two hours on false prophets? We do need, we do need to talk about that topic, but probably another, another evening. And we want to expect Cassidy's time. Thanks so much for coming on the show and talking with us and you need to check out Cassidy Campbell's channel. Obviously he came on here to promote him, you know, promote his channel. Cause we have such a big audience and hopefully if we get all of our subscribers, all like 100% of our subscribers to add to his, the number won't even change. Of course. We really appreciate you coming on the show, talking with us and you know, he makes, he makes some funny videos out there, but you know, one thing that we like about Cassidy, he does actually love the Lord. He saved, he is a soul winner. And so, you know, that's hard to find. It's hard to find someone like that out there that cares and check out his rumble channel. Is there any other platforms we can find you on? Uh, just Instagram rumble. It's all Cassidy Campbell. I was going to say, I should have you on my, uh, my, uh, cause of that, that channel. I'm just, I just started posting on there again. I only have like pastor Mahia and pastor Anderson interview. Uh, so I want to have you on there as well. I'll just get some questions and stuff. So we should, uh, we should hook up. So I think that's going to pretty much do it for us on our show this evening. Thanks so much for tuning in. It's always 8 PM live. We've got a couple more great shows. For this season. You don't want to miss it. Um, hopefully we'll end up having some Collins as well in the, in the upcoming shows. Um, we might have some other guests and, uh, we're looking to do some other games too. If you ever have a suggestion, you know, put a comment. If you have a certain topic, a certain thing you want us to cover in the show comments, help us to get at least 10 more viewers on YouTube. And you know, I'm just joking, of course, but, uh, you know, and of course we're going to actually try to get on some new platforms. Check us out on got resource.com. Check us out on rumble. And of course you can even get this podcast on a lot of other platforms. What do we got there? Ben? We're on Google podcast. We're on stitcher radio app. We're on Spotify, apple podcasts and a pod bean. That's my favorite. Yeah. If you just Google the Baptist bias podcast, you'll find every single there's actually more than that even, but I made sure to blast this thing out everywhere I could. Well for that, it's going to do us. Go ahead. Ben, sign us off. Thanks pastor Shelley. That's it for our show. Be back again next Tuesday at 8 PM central. We thank you for tuning in live in the chat room and participating there. But until next time, this is Ben Naim signing off. We will talk to you guys again after a while.