I have to admit this whole thing has gotten me interested in how much money they could possibly be making off of these quite clearly fake videos. I wonder if there are any Paracasters with Youtube experience who could shed some light on the subject. I know that the people who do this type of thing for a living regularly post up videos that get views in the multiple millions, looking at their channel, they have a few that have broken this mark, but most are from a year to two years ago. He can't be making that much money from this and if he's not interested in possibly landing a gig doing production, you have to wonder what the hell the point is? He certainly isn't making himself any friends among serious UFO researchers. My point is, I really don't see this going anywhere for him, unless the profit he's making off of posting Youtube vids is enough for him to live on, I have to wonder where he thinks this is going to get him.
I can go into a more detailed explanation later, but this is it in a nutshell. How much he makes depends on a number of different factors. Is he independent, or
part of a network? Networks like Machinima and Maker can take upwards of 50% of ad revenue. Are the video views on desktop or mobile? mobile revenue at present is tiny relevant to desktop, but growing rapidly.
Revenue is measured in CPMs (cost per thousand) and RPMs (revenue per thousand). Think of RPM like net profit, after everyone gets their cut.
Approximate average RPM is around $3.00, although this average is currently declining, due to Youtube opening video monetization up to anyone.
Just as an example, let's say the Cousins are getting a $5.00 RPM, due to their channels popularity (it could be as high as $10.00 RPM for the most popular networks).
The "UFO Sightings Sea Monsters Enhanced Footage and Analyses!" video has 2,164,451 views. At a $5.00 RPM, that comes to $10,822.00
(2,164,451/1000 = 2,164.40 x $5.00 = $10,822.00).
Then we estimate that only 70% of RPM is being counted. These are for desktop views, which as I said earlier are more lucrative at present than mobile views.
This would bring total approx. revenue for this one video to $7,575.40 ($10,822.00 x 70% = $7,575.40)
It could be lower. it could be higher (YouTube and their top content producers tend to keep the details to themselves for competitive reasons).
Now multiply the number of video he has that has these many views (I saw 7 at a quick glance) times $7,575.40, and you get $53,027.80 aggregate revenues
over the time of these videos release.
This is why it's of utmost importance that they keep feeding the beast that they've created. New content equals new views, equals new revenue.
With 1.23 Billion views for "Gangnam Style", Psy's cut of YouTube ad dollars was roughly $870,000.
The 58-second viral "Charlie Bit My Finger" made its creators around $158,560.
Blake told us all what he was about from the get go. "Is it interesting?" "Is it controversial?" His language is Viral Video 101. He's actually very good at it.
Hopefully this gives everyone a good idea about what's his primary motivation. And with that kind of relatively passive income at stake, who can really blame him.
C2C does it, Project Camelot does. Why not? He's telling us by his actions and words that he's the 21st century version of a tabloid newspaper, but without the
overhead. (Print returns were a killer). Chris's P.T. Barnum monicker for him is more than apt.
I say relatively passive, because it's fairly obvious that they're producing a lot of their own content. As the Star Wars fan film article illustrates, they know their way
around After Effects. They probably hang out on Creative Cow's site, checking out the latest VFX tutorials. It's actually quite genius. You never have to worry about
not getting new "sightings".
And as the young kids say these days, don't be a hater. I would strongly suggest to Gene and Chris, that you guys setup a YouTube channel as counter-programming.
done right, it would not only inform, but also establish a decent revenue stream (rent's got to be paid folks